Originally posted by Recurve Addict:
would that be a form issue? He shoots split but I shoot 3 under. I shot his bow and same result. I grabbed the same arrow and shot my bow and it flew like a dart.
As I understand it, you have shot both bows with the same bare shaft, and have gotten nock high on his bow and not yours. Has he also shot both bows with the same result? I also think I understand from your first post that the bare shaft doesn't have any significant nock right or left, indicating the spine is at least in the ballpark? Although if the nock high is really extreme, that might not mean much. Would you say it's more than 15*?
It could be a tillering issue. I have an otherwise high quality bow that had nock high I couldn't control, and solved the problem by reversing the top and bottom limbs. At the time, I thought that was a novel solution, but I've since read of several other people doing that. However, that evidently isn't a possibility on your friend's bow. It is listed as two piece, although in pictures it appears to be one piece. How does the bow come apart?
if it's brand new and still can be returned, I would consider returning it, once you eliminate form errors for sure. If it can't be returned, and you can get the nock high below 15*, I would say just live with it and let the feathers correct it. More than 15*, I would look for some qualified bowyer who can check the tiller and correct it, if possible.