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. . . For starters set your knocking point at 3/16" above 90 degrees, and shoot feathered arrows.
Quote from: Old Dog on May 06, 2014, 08:14:45 PM . . . For starters set your knocking point at 3/16" above 90 degrees, and shoot feathered arrows. Follow up question, if I may. I am using a Bear Tamerlane recurve 27#. I put the nocking point so the arrow is perpendicular to the string. I have a problem in that I have set the sight all the way to the bottom stop yet the arrows still hit high. I've been compensating by aiming low, but I'd like to be able to sight right on.Is this because my nocking point should be changed? BTW, this is the Bear factory sight.
Great bow. How many pound pull? The string length you need is 60AMO, but it will actually be 56 1/2 to 57" long. Make sure you get a Dacron string. The older bows don't like any of the new "fast flight" strings very much.Use a bow stringer to string the bow, then set the brace height to somewhere around 7 1/4" by twisting the string to lengthen the brace, or untwist to shorten. For starters set your knocking point at 3/16" above 90 degrees, and shoot feathered arrows.
27# Tamerlane? got any pictures ? I love those old chunks of wood. If you have the sight all the way at the bottom, it is going to hit high...Put it all the way at the top, and try at 10 yards... . . . but back to your bow, any pictures? What year? is it Rosewood?...