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-   -   Technique question - missing right & left (https://www.huntingnet.com/forum/technical/170581-technique-question-missing-right-left.html)

Dipsnort 12-16-2006 10:51 PM

Technique question - missing right & left
 
As would be expected, the farther I am away from the target, the looser my groups get. At 50 yards I'm consistently hitting withing 2" up or down, but as much as 6" right or left. Is there a typical technique flaw that might be causing me to miss horizontally noticably more than vertically?

PA.JAY 12-17-2006 06:15 AM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
here you go ! If you do this correctly you will be right on at all your far shots !

Walk back 20 yds from the target in a straight line, and using your 20-yd pin, fire at the sticker.

Don't worry about where the arrow hits.

Step back in a straight line to 30-yds and use your 20-yd pin, fire at the same sticker. Repeat at 35 yds and 40 yds.

If your arrows look like this pattern "/",
move your arrow rest 1/16th inch in any direction.

Repeat the test and fire at 20 yds, 30 yds, 35 yds and 40 yds,50 yds.

Did the pattern get more vertical?
Great, move your arrow rest 1/16th inch in the same direction.

Did the pattern get worse?
Move your arrow rest in the other direction.

Keep adjusting your arrow rest,
keep using the same 20 yd sight setting, and
eventually, you will get an arrow pattern that looks like "|".

When your arrows are straight up and down,
lock down your arrow rest position.

Now, the arrows that finally look like this "|",
may be straight up and down, but they may be several inches
away from the weighted string.

Now, we adjust windage for your sight ring.

Pick a direction. Move the sight ring 1/16th of an inch.
Repeat the test and using the 20 yd sight setting,
fire arrows at 20 yds, 30 yds, 35 yds and 40 yds.

Is the vertical pattern of arrows getting closer to the weighted string?
If yes, keep adjusting your sight windage in that direction.

Is the vertical pattern of arrows getting farther away from the weighted string?
Then, move the sight windage in the other direction.

Eventually, you will have all the arrows touching the string.

Lock down the sight windage.

Your centershot and sight windage are now perfect.




ash2042 12-17-2006 08:44 AM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
Vey nice PA.JAY
[align=left] [/align]

mobow 12-17-2006 08:53 AM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
PA went into great length there, and he's right......Sounds to me like you have one of 2 problems....Either you are torquing the bow (canting it side to side) or you are not tuned perfectly....Most likely a combination of both. If your sight has a level, use it...Paper tune the bow so it shoots perfect bullet holes. If your bow is slightly out of tune, the arrows will "drift" right or left the farther down range you get...It may not be noticeable at 20 yards, but 40 on up you're gonna see it in the form of drift. The farther away you get, the farther left/right you shoot...

Matt / PA 12-17-2006 10:22 AM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
Another thing to consider is a consistent anchor and your bow arm.......If you are anchoring in slightly different places on your face (with slightly different contours) the arrow can come off differently each time.

With regards to your bow arm, if you are shooting with a high shoulder and your elbow pointing outward it will be very difficult to hold consistently in a horizontal direction. Make sure your bow arm shoulder is turned down and locked and your elbow is pointing downward instead of out. This provides better lateral stability and bone on bone contact in your shoulder which will steady those lefts and rights.

Dipsnort 12-18-2006 06:51 PM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
Thanks for the insight, guys. In my particular case, I think it may be a matter of technique instead of improper tuning or rest adjustment. I say this because at times my shots are very closely grouped in every way, and other times they miss to the left and to the right (but not up and down) while shooting from the same exact location. For instance, I'll shoot my 6 arrows from the same spot at 50 yards and they will be spread out horizontally by several inches but with very little spread vertically. I can understand the need to tune as PA.JAY suggested if my problem occurs when I shoot from several different distances. If I am wrong (wouldn't be the first time) please correct me.

If it helps, here is my stance. How are my shoulder & elbow position compared to Matt's suggestions?





Matt / PA 12-18-2006 10:24 PM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
Dipsnort,
Your form for the most part looks pretty good!...as does your bow fit but there are 2 things that stick out to me from your pictures and one I suspected could be a cause of what you are describing but I didn't mention it earlier.

You are "heeling" the grip quite a bit.......you can tell this not only by the side view actaully deep into your hand, but also by the total vertical position of your fingers.
In other words you have too much hand into the grip and with no wrist sling to promote a completely free handed shot (for fear of dropping the bow) most likely you are impartingtoo muchhand pressure before the shot but even more importantly DURING the shot.
You are FORCED to grab the bow or its gone when you shoot and grabbing the bow is one of the biggest causes of left right misses. Think about it, the shot fires and your hand will unconciously snatch the handle and who knows what direction ,when, and with how much force.

My suggestion, get a wrist sling.......set it so that its not to tight not to loose. You need to get used to the feel that you have a safety net there so you can concentrate on not closing that bow hand at the shot.

Next you need to change your bow hand position. I'll edit this post with a nice illustration I found that will show you proper hand placement.

Also in the one pic I see you are touching the string to your nose.......while the next pic down you are floating off of it. Not sure if that was just the timing of the picture taker but if it isn't......yeah, problem.;)

Without actually seeing you shoot my, best educated guess isthat your left right inconsistency is from a combination of anticipating the shot (Commanding, punching ) combined with snatching the grip when the shot goes off. Thats a double whammy.
You'll do a couple in a row nicely and then something will change in your release and the other hand takes over and its a flyer.

Shoulder and elbow look good, bow fit looks pretty good too considering the short ATA length........hand placement and lack of a sling are hurting you.

EDIT:
Ok I'm striking out on finding the exact illustration I wanted that was perfect so I will try to describe the proper hand placement for you........
What you have in your pictures is essentially a pistol grip, your forefingers are stright up and down like you would have them on the grip of a handgun. Thats wrong.:DYou'll wind up with pressure on your thumb and your heel and you'll grab the bow guaranteed.

What you need to do is prior to drawing your bow stick your arm straight out in front of you and with your fingers relaxed place your knuckles at about a 45 degree angle. THAT's what your hand should look like at full draw. Put the grip into the meat of your thumb and off the heel of your hand.......your fingers should remain in that 45 degree angle, relaxed and OFF the grip. Just let the bow do it's thing.
Also set your hand placement BEFORE you draw. DO NOT grab the grip and then try to slide into a proper placement later at full draw you just can't do that consistently. Get into the habit of setting that hand angle on the grip, relax the fingers and then draw.....without changing your hand at full draw.
Now with the wrist sling in place and giving you the confidence to shoot without fear of dropping the bow you'll be able to shoot with a completely relaxed hand and will stop grabbing the bow. If your fingers aren't on the front of the grip its much harder to induce lateral pressure before during and after the shot.
Much like a rifle shooter needs a surprise and free floating shot to be accurate so does an archer.......learn to shoot with back tension, or at the very least squeeze the trigger slowly and don't try to anticipate exactly when the shot will go off. Just concentrate on aiming, keeping the hand relaxed and letting the bow act naturally every time.

Here's one picture I found that is OK for showing a better hand placement like I am describing.
http://jousimetsastys.net/drupal/imgs/f5567859994c1fcc39ff3c778a859acc-16_640x480.jpg

Good luck with it I hope it was of some help!

walks with a gimp 12-18-2006 11:50 PM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
Try this on hand placement. Go to any outside corner in your house and place your bow hand on and lean against the corner with about 50 pounds of your weight. You'll fine that it's not comfortable anywhere on the soft tissue on your hand but the base of your lifeline where the two bones of your wrist come together are less sensitive. Place that lifeline base against the center or towards the outside edge of your bow's grip. This will give you close to a 45 degrees knuckle placement to the riser of the bow instead of your knuckles parallel to the riser.

ijimmy 12-19-2006 05:42 AM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
Dipsnort , your form looks excelent , 3 sugestions

Make sure your arrow is dead on for spine

Your draw may be slightly 1/4 inch or so short on draw length , I see you not ancoring off of your nose in the second picture , a 1/4 inch can make a big diferance .

Your grip looks good to me , but I never liked hoyts grips , they make them in 3 veriaties now I believe , depending on the model year bow you have and thats from the factory , there is allways aftermarket grips that may help with your consistancy .

If you are shooting fat arrows in the wind say 24 -25 -or 26 series alluminum shafts in 10 mph plus wind , left to right groups are the norm , skiny shafts do better in the wind .

BGfisher 12-19-2006 09:49 AM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
Another thing to look for is draw length. Although your form looks pretty good overall, an adjustment in draw length of as little as 1/8" can influence right/left scattering.



YooperMike 12-19-2006 10:45 AM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
I used to have the same problem and I was assuming that something was wrong with my bow. Turns out, it was me. the farther away from the target I got, it seemed I started torque my bow. I guess I was concentrating harder and trying to move as little as possible and I was tensing up. I have since corrected my grip, and all is well. Could be your problem too, as opposed to something wrong with the bow, which makes it an easier fix!

Corvus 12-19-2006 01:45 PM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
Do you have a level on your sight? When I pull up, I'm always surprised at how far my bow is torqued once I've checked the level.

nodog 12-19-2006 05:51 PM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
Most of the time for me it's my arrows.# the arrows and make some charts and see if it's them and not you.

Dipsnort 12-20-2006 12:39 PM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
Thanks so much for the help, guys! :)

Matt, I really appreciate the very detailed description of the grip and shot technique. Especially since I have no "formal" training and have been learning everything I know from this forum. The bow sling is on my X-mas list and I think it will definitely help as well.

As for the anchoring point (string to nose), those pictures were taken soon after I took up the sport last Summer and my anchoring points were not very well established at the time. I conciously put the string on the end of my nose each time now. But thanks for pointing that out. It tells me you guys are paying attention to the details. ;)

Another question. I've seen many timeswhere people recommend shooting with back tension, but I'm not really sure what that means. Can somebody please explain?

Browning_1 12-20-2006 01:54 PM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
Back tension is basically using the muscles in your back when holding at full draw....picture trying to pinch a dollar bill between your shoulder blades when at full draw...these are the muscles you want to use. I'm sure someone else will be able to explain it better.

Grandviewer 12-20-2006 02:53 PM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
Browning 1 does describe it well using the large back muscles to draw your release arm back instead of punching a trigger. Back Tension pullsyour finger against itslowly squeezing until the arrow is shot. All the while your concentration is on your target. Your release may not be the type that's back tension friendly but you get the picture. Another idea is your arms' muscles are as relaxed as possible through the shot with back tension. A flex muscle in your arm will move around more than a relaxed muscle will.

Dipsnort 12-20-2006 04:27 PM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
Makes sense, I'll try that. Thanks again. :)

TFOX 12-20-2006 05:09 PM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
The muscles that you use to hold the bow back at full draw and keep it from creeping forward are the same muscles you use to squeeze the trigger off.This was the explanation that made it click in my mind.:eek:


Back tension is hard to learn and you need a true back tension to understand the feel.They really aren't that expensive ( some are ;))and are a great teaching tool.


www.lancasterarchery.com I have the T.R.U. BALL TRU TENSION ULTRA 3 FINGER and it works great.It is $49.95 and that really isn't that bad.Especially for what it can teach you.;)

ijimmy 12-22-2006 08:44 AM

RE: Technique question - missing right & left
 
Back tention is a term used for many diferant releases , and methods of form .
It meens diferant things to diferant pepole , dont get hung up on it , many have an obsesion with it .


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