If it it shooting a clean hole in paper... there is NO reason that it will not group. after paper tuning it Will group. maybe left, right, up,down IT will group. walk back tune and All arrow will group together. sounds to me you may have form issuses
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
not happy with mathews
Collapse
X
-
Let us know how those correct spined arrows do for you.
Should atleast get a group with your broadheads... Then from there get a group with your field points
If they are not the same POI your bow needs to be tuned... And we can walk you through the process.
But one step at a time to figure out the problem... only change ONE variable at a time!
Comment
-
calm down
[QUOTE=J.H;4204963]"The mathews dont work no more"? Well there is quite a few dead critters on the wrong side of my mathews that if they could....they would disagree with you. But they cant....cuz they are DEAD[/QUOTE
relax -sorry for my lame sarcasm-I know they are excellent bows.
Comment
-
Maybe..I'm missing something..because so many bowhunters talk about it so much, so it must be important... but.. why is grouping your broadheads an important thing?
I come from the school of thought , right or wrong, that my first shot is the shot I should be concerned with.. not the follow up shots.. because in a hunting scenario it will be rare that there will ever be a follow up shot, let alone a third...
I understand from a tournament shooting perspective.. but who shoots broadheads in tournament shooting?
I also understand the idea that tight groups mean efficiency and accuracy in the site/bow/arrow/archer setup.
But when if your first shot is where you are aiming.. isn't that the point?
Comment
-
Originally posted by systemnt View PostMaybe..I'm missing something..because so many bowhunters talk about it so much, so it must be important... but.. why is grouping your broadheads an important thing?
I come from the school of thought , right or wrong, that my first shot is the shot I should be concerned with.. not the follow up shots.. because in a hunting scenario it will be rare that there will ever be a follow up shot, let alone a third...
I understand from a tournament shooting perspective.. but who shoots broadheads in tournament shooting?
I also understand the idea that tight groups mean efficiency and accuracy in the site/bow/arrow/archer setup.
But when if your first shot is where you are aiming.. isn't that the point?
Gone flingin arrows be back when I'm done...
Comment
-
Originally posted by systemnt View PostMaybe..I'm missing something..because so many bowhunters talk about it so much, so it must be important... but.. why is grouping your broadheads an important thing?
I come from the school of thought , right or wrong, that my first shot is the shot I should be concerned with.. not the follow up shots.. because in a hunting scenario it will be rare that there will ever be a follow up shot, let alone a third...
I understand from a tournament shooting perspective.. but who shoots broadheads in tournament shooting?
I also understand the idea that tight groups mean efficiency and accuracy in the site/bow/arrow/archer setup.
But when if your first shot is where you are aiming.. isn't that the point?
Really??? JUST like in rifle shooting you need a good group.
Scenario: You Fire/shoot 5 rounds/arrows.
1st Shot is 9 inches high and 3 inches to the right.
2nd shot is 8 inches Low and 7 inches to the left.
3rd shot is 14 inches High and 6 inches to the right.
4th shot is 18 inches High and 3 inches to the right.
5th shot is a bullseye.
How will you ever know where your shot is going?
How can you ever move your pin to the Point of Impact(POI) if the POI is ALWAYS moving?
Consitency is KEY. If you shoot CONSTINENLY 3 inches High and 2 Inches Left you can move your pin there and be "SIGHTED IN"
How on earth could you sight ANYTHING in without at LEAST a decent group?Last edited by Coach W; 09-16-2011, 08:58 AM.
Comment
Comment