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Posted: 1/2/2012 7:34:20 PM
THE IMAGE ABOVE IS A PAID ADVERTISEMENT
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Posted: 1/2/2012 7:37:37 PM
Good enough to kill deer.
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Posted: 1/2/2012 7:42:27 PM
Form looks good to me with drawing elbow high, as it should be. Draw length looks perfect, with the seam between arrow and nock being right below the corner of your mouth.
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Posted: 1/7/2012 11:29:59 PM
Looks good to me too.
I changed my grip about 3 years ago. I read about the Mathews Staff guys shooting with a closed fist grip with their fingertips on the back of the grip. The only place your hand touches is the "meat" of your thumb and your fingertips. The tips, like fingernails tips, lightly touching the back of the riser but without your fingers touching your bow. . After a little practice, it is second nature. I'm not sure who to give the credit to, but I read about it somewhere, so it is not my idea. It worked pretty good for me and I need all the help I can get as I age. I simply cannot shoot the way I used to and this "seemed" to make me a little more consistent. Give it a shot and see what you think. |
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Posted: 1/7/2012 11:48:56 PM
If you shoot open hand, be sure and close all your fingers instead of fanning them out.
But hey, if you're shooting good that way, don't change a thing. |
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Posted: 1/8/2012 9:10:31 AM
Looks real good.
There's only a couple things I'd really try to focus on. I'd use a relaxed grip instead of extending my fingers. You want a rock solid point where your bow rests in your hand and if you extend your fingers, that point becomes less consistent. In practice, if your hand is completely relaxed, it's going to be the same for each shot and you wont have to think about what position your hand is in so you can be repetative. It will already be where it nees to be so you can focus on form. Here's an example pic:
The other thing I would work on is getting your weight shifted to where it's 50/50 on each foot. From your pic, it looks like you are carrying a little more on your back leg than your front. That often gives the illusion of too long of a draw (some places are really bad about saying everyone is overdrawn) when a simple shift of the hips will bring everything in line. Picture this, if you were wearing a buttoned shirt, you'd want all of your buttons to be perfectly vertical and perpendicular to the flat level earth and line up with the top button on your pants. Than line, if extended all the way down to your feet, should be exactly in the middle of your feet. After all that, you can look and see where your nocking point is in relation to your eye, corner of mouth, etc., and have a real good idea of where your draw length should be. Looking good and keep us updated! |
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Posted: 1/22/2012 5:01:43 PM
Try lowering left elbow a little that will change the angle that your palm contacts the grip. Like someone else said relax your hand and your wrist.
Practice practice practice! |
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Posted: 3/20/2012 5:12:04 PM
Shorten draw length a half inch, relax your grip hand (as indicated), both eyes open and keep your finger off that trigger unless you are aiming at a backstop.
Beyond that, it's more about doing the same exact thing every time. This will net you better results than constantly tweaking your form, anchor equipment etc... |
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Posted: 3/22/2012 7:55:27 PM
Originally Posted By bowbender7: Shorten draw length a half inch, relax your grip hand (as indicated), both eyes open and keep your finger off that trigger unless you are aiming at a backstop. Beyond that, it's more about doing the same exact thing every time. This will net you better results than constantly tweaking your form, anchor equipment etc... Thanks for the responses. I just wanted to point out that my finger was behind the trigger holding it forward, not on the trigger. My release has a hair trigger so I am paranoid about that. I have tried relaxing my grip hand (and rotating it to about 45 degrees) since posting this thread and its much better. Honestly, I didn't know I was extending my fingers like that until I saw the photos. I just knew I was trying not to grip the bow tightly. Also I adjusted my draw length by buying an EVO set to 26.5". LOL. I will have to work on keeping both eyes open. I struggle with that with all shooting. |
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Posted: 3/27/2012 12:52:48 AM
I am left eye dominant but shoot a right hand bow. Last summer I was homeless we sold our house and had to stay in my mother-in law's basement. Fortunately she lives about 3 blocks from the indoor range. With a lot of practice I managed to train my brain to accept what my R eye is seeing with both open.
The moral is keep trying you'll get it. I find I don't drop the bow prematurely to see hits wit both eyes open. |
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Posted: 4/12/2012 9:54:01 AM
[Last Edit: 4/12/2012 10:02:53 AM by VBC]
Originally Posted By bowbender7:
Shorten draw length a half inch, relax your grip hand (as indicated), both eyes open and keep your finger off that trigger unless you are aiming at a backstop. Beyond that, it's more about doing the same exact thing every time. This will net you better results than constantly tweaking your form, anchor equipment etc... I was going to say it looks like your drawlength might be a half inch to an inch too long. A tell-tale is that you're leaning back slightly (you've run out of wingspan, so your body is arcing back to make up the rest). Your spine should be perfectly vertical when you are in your comfortable hold and all anchored up. The bottom of the collar of your shirt should be directly over your belt buckle. And release hand forearm should be running parallel with the arrow, both vertically and horizontally when your draw length / release length / d-loop length is perfect. Too long a drawlength also makes you creep forward before the shot because your body is hyperextended trying to hold the string all the way back and it will have a tendency to want to relax into your natural (shorter) draw length. When you have your drawlength right, you will find shooting to be extremely pleasurable. You can hold against the backwall and aim with absolutely no creep. |
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Posted: 11/11/2012 10:20:25 PM
I agree that your DL is too long, I'd shorten it an 1" and go from there. It looks like your elbow is locked and it should have a slight bend in it. also, like mentioned before, relax the grip on you bow hand. I can't tell by the photo, but you shouldn't be gripping the release either, just let the hand relax. Other than that everything else looks good, you have your nose to the string so you can get a consistent anchor.
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