I am a believer in bareshafting. I have always been able to do so with Sentman bows, HH longbows, Habu bows (both LB and recurves), Saxon (recurves), and a few others including both longbows and recurves with INCREDIBLE IMPRESSIVE arrow flight. With some of the above mentioned bows, I have even been able to bareshaft some broadheads (which isn't supposed to be possible according to some, but I did so when testing various broadheads for wind plane). That said, there have been a few other bows that I have not been able get consistent "clean" arrow flight either with bareshafts or in some cases even fletched arrows...resulting in poor groupings for ME. I also tend to have a nocking point lower than most other people (just a hair over 3/8" above shelf when using a 2117), yet the bows that "didn't work" for me required unusually high nocking points (about 5/8" to in some cases 3/4" above shelf) to make them do their best (which was still less than perfect). At this stage of my life, I simply do not wish to battle such issues, and now only seek bows that work with MY style of shooting.
When analyzing such tests, I have repeatedly noticed that some of the bows that didn't shoot well for me with MY style of shooting would shoot better if I lifted my hand up off the grip and only held the bow in the throat by using a straight wrist to keep the bow's fulcrum point between my thumb and index finger. Most recent was a Morrison foam & carbon bow. The thing is I don't shoot that way, as I hold a bow and "balance it" on the wrist (not with the "heal" of my hand) by centering it on the bones in my forearm as they act like the "fulcrum" point with my wrist and hand simply being what holds the bow in alignment with those forearm bones. On some of the bows that didn't work for ME, I noticed I could get good arrow flight if I moved my hand up a bit to the point that I shot off my hand about 1/4" - 1/2" above the shelf, which I am obviously not going to keep doing, nor am I going to use a flipper rest, but this illustrated to me that tiller is obviously playing a role in whether or not a bow will work for my style...with my bowhand down, bow balanced on forearm of bowarm, and I also draw the arrow with the split finger method.
Are there other such archers that use a "hand down" position to balance the bow on their forearm bones and also shoot split finger that own the Centaur Chimera that have been able to CONSISTENTLY bareshaft this design...and if so, when doing so was the bow stable? I am also curious as to what nocking point location did you end up with (distance above shelf)?
I ask this because there are obviously a number of people out there that shoot with the "high wrist" position...which seems to require a different tiller...as such bows don't work well for me.
When it comes to bows, beauty is when all you see on your fletched arrows is the fletching spinning around the little dot in the center (the nock) as the arrow flies towards the target. I don't accept ANY wobble...no porposing, no fishtailing.