You do not want to use the screw to stop against the gear! You are not gaining anything by moving the sub down to the bottom of the rack. You want your 20 yard position setup with the rack close to flush with the bottom of the bar if you are not using the rack stop, or sticking out at least 3/8" in order to use the rack stop for your home position stop. Otherwise, you are losing rigidity and contact with the rack. The way your sight is currently setup you should move your sub up at least one set of holes on the front so your rack has full contact on the guide pins up inside the bar of the sight. You will run out of clearance on your arrow with your sight, or you will run out of sight tape before you run out of adjustment. You are gaining absolutely nothing in terms of clearance by moving your rack that high to start. Otherwise, awesome video and setup!
@@Tullminator Use the rack stop if you want a zero stop, that is why it is in the box with the sight. The screw on the end of the rack is only there so you can't run the rack out of the gear on accident. The stop, is the rectangular C clamp looking piece that comes with the sights. For those wanting to use the rack stop for their "home" position, you can remove that bottom small 4-40 socket head screw to get more adjustment on the rack stop. This is all written in the instructions that come with the Boonies. What you do not want, is the rack inside the body so the rails don't have full engagement on the rail, especially where you are shooting most of your shots. It's ok for a handful of shots if you are shooting extreme distances. 99% of the time, even with the rack sticking 1/2" out the bottom of the body at 20 yards, you will hit your arrow well before you run out of adjustment in the sight when dialing down for longer distance.
@@Tullminator Your arrow will hit your arrow if you dial the sight down low enough, aka for longer shots. The rack stop is a C shaped clamp that attaches to the bottom of the rack and hits what I am calling the body of the sight. The body being the part of the sight that the rack moves up and down inside of.