MossyAUV wrote:I find that my arrows bounce coming of the rest on my recurve. What factors could be adding to this?
woody wrote:Personally I find my best results by shooting off the pads of my fingertips, despite what the "experts" recomend.
A deep hook into the finger creases does not work for me, off the finger tips seems to be much better, for me.
.MossyAUV wrote:Sorry for being brief I use an internature bow and was using some cheap wood arrows with a FOC percentage of less than 2%. Using 1 finger above and 1 below grip on the string. I have tried using A.B.A 2315's(Used for practice with my compound bow normally) with FOC percentage of 8.6% which showed great improvement.
ScottyD wrote:woody wrote:Personally I find my best results by shooting off the pads of my fingertips, despite what the "experts" recomend.
A deep hook into the finger creases does not work for me, off the finger tips seems to be much better, for me.
A good way to do nervous damage to your fingertips. I mean, if you dont want any sensation in your fingers after years of shooting, who am i to preech.
You should be able to tune and get a good release just fine from holding the finger in the first groove, plenty of olympic archers do, and they arnt the sort to do something that doesnt yeild loads of 10's!


woody wrote:Your olympic archers are not using heavy recurves and a high, side of face, hunting anchor either.
MossyAUV wrote:i am going to get some new arrows see how my grouping improves. I'm thinking ultralight xt's for a start.
MossyAUV wrote:pro's would be nice but for my first real go at getting set up for target shooting i just can't justify it when the bow i am using doesn't even have sight yet and only a basic rest i'm thinking of a w & w magnetic(for a start at least).

Cabba wrote:This is a nice way to welcome someone to the forum. Poor Mossy got on here asking for help & all you two do is bag each other.

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