I am not a tuning dummy! Let me re-phrase that... I never thought I was a tuning dummy. My recent frustration when my bare shaft "check engine light" came on has been lamented here and I'll merely "top-line" for this plea for an explanation. I switched to 3 under years ago. I arrow tune using multiple methods, but prefer shooting bare shaft mainly as a sanity check for consistent form. I hadn't shot a bare shaft in months until recently and was appalled to get a very nice group... about 18 inches low at 20 yds. I finally had to draw in front of a mirror to recognize the obvious... my draw arm elbow was pointing up at about a 45 degree angle. The cause, I can now safely say, was my anchor point gradually migrating up my face to get that arrow closer to my eye and reduce the sight picture gap. The fletching masked all the bad arrow flight characteristics, but the bare shaft doesn't lie. The cure was to move my anchor back down to the corner of my chin, which restored the correct alignment of both arms. Would somebody who's more knowledgeable than I (read everyone) please explain why a high elbow release can cause an arrow to nose dive to that degree. The only real symptom I observed was that the bare shaft appeared to have a tail-high kick at midrange, but usually entered the target flat (and very low). My first thought was that I must have been loading the lower limb more (relative to the upper)and causing the nock to travel downward instead of horizontally. This might slam the tail of the arrow off the shelf, causing the kick I observed. But I have no rest or fletching wear to support that theory. The return to a lower anchor also quieted the bow immensely. What gives?