Originally posted by Rick Moss:
no quiver. moved the string silencers up and down. got the arrows from dave, he said they are plenty heavy enough...but either of us know the grain weight. moved the BH around. nocks are actually a little looser than I like, but they work....who knows. I will figure it out, or I will hang it on the wall and it will be an $1180 wall decoration.
Here is something to try before you go hanging it on the wall brutha.... Try heeling down a bit on the grip. Typically if the limbs are the same length, and the deepest part of the grip is located dead center of the bow. even to 1/8th positive tiller should work for most of the guys from high wrist to medium pressure on the grip.
For guys that are accustomed to shooting a straight grip, or even a locator grip with more pressure on the heel, a more positive tiller like you have discribed will help with vibration and noise level....
A bow can be balanced to different pressure point locations on the grip. Tiller CAN make a difference in extreme conditions.
Twisting a string or adjusting brace will NOT effect tiller. tiller is only a measurement from the limb fades to the string at brace. nothing is going to change that but a bowyer on a one piece bow....
have you ever noticed how some bows feel different and react different than others? I'm not talking performance. I'm talking how it feels after the shot. You can spend years looking for the perfect bow that is balanced just perfect to match your shooting style, and horse around tuning arrows for it.. and some guys actually find the right set up eventually..... Or.... You can try having something custom built to match your shooting style some time.... Night and day difference bro....Kirk
btw.... is this a TD bow? or a one piece?