RE: knock height question
Sounds like another dipstick 'bow tech' who doesn't have enough sense to make sure the bow is in tiller before setting it up. [:@]
Measure your tiller. Stretch a string across your axles and measure from the belly of the limbs at each end of the riser to the string. If the readings are not the same, adjust the limb bolts to make them the same.
Lower your arrow rest so the arrow is sitting level with the bolt hole in the riser.
Lower your nock height so the arrowsits at90 degrees with the string.
Now, you can leave things as is and retune from there or, you can go a bit further and fine tune the tiller to fit your shooting style.
Draw the bow slowly while watching the sights. If they want to pull up, add a bit of draw weight to the bottom limb, take some off the top limb, or both. If the bow wants to pull down during the draw, take draw weight off the bottom limb, add to the top limb or both.
The end result you want is for the bow to sit steady in your hand through the entire draw cycle. It's easy to do and generally only takes a small tweak or two on the limb bolts. The end result is well worth the extra little bit of effort though. The bow will hold steadier and shoot with less noise and vibration, not to mention being MUCH easier to tune.
Now, when you get the bow in tiller, readjust your nock height. You'll have to adjust your peep so you can see through it again. Then you can tune the bow and get it sighted in.