Rahmpton
So I don't belive I'm twisting the string at full draw. I've gone through some effort to avoid that issue. The string lays behind the joint of my fingers, which is to say I have a fairly deep hook because it has proven to be the most consistent "and least damaging to my fingers).
In my head this is what I see from anchor through release. My anchor point is in my back where my shoulder blade bottoms out against my spine. It's been very consistent, my extreme spread over 5 arrows averages 3 to 5 fps over the chronograph in the shop.
So here's my shot process after getting to anchor. Bottom out the scapula on the spine, set the shoulder back slightly to lock everything in place, verify sight picture, start pulling the shoulder/scapula/elbow behind me (not away from the target, but to my rear), focus on increasing "pressure" while picturing keeping my fingers closed. Somewhere in there as I feel "pressure" or tension build in my back between scapula and spine the release will happen. This specific moment of building pressure is the last "go/no-go" check for my shot, if I'm going to abort it happens here.
At the actual release, my mind sees the string cut through my fingers, and my fingers just curl in towards my palm as the pressure from the string disappears.
This whole process from anchor to release takes 3 or 4 seconds.
That's the most detailed explanation of my release I've ever written out, so forgive me for being long winded. One thing you touched on I'm interested in is my bow being "tourqed". I'm not sure what you mean by this but, I have noticed some inconsistency with how my bow recoils after the shot. At a guess I think it has to do with how my grip is applying pressure to the bow. I have for sure noticed grip pressure changing my point of impact with arrows.
Again, sorry for the novel, looking forward to any thoughts.