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I still shoot my 20 year old compound bow for deer hunting. Still has the old hard plastic arrow rest on it. Anytime I buy arrows now I have to pull the knocks out and rotate so the odd color is facing out at 9 oclock when knocked. If I don't do that my groupings open up quite a bit. I feel like even if I buy a newer bow... I will still turn the knocks just because that's how I was taught and that has always worked for me. So as the others have said! TURN THOSE KNOCKS! lol
Quote from: W_Ellison2011 on May 29, 2018, 07:20:03 PMI still shoot my 20 year old compound bow for deer hunting. Still has the old hard plastic arrow rest on it. Anytime I buy arrows now I have to pull the knocks out and rotate so the odd color is facing out at 9 oclock when knocked. If I don't do that my groupings open up quite a bit. I feel like even if I buy a newer bow... I will still turn the knocks just because that's how I was taught and that has always worked for me. So as the others have said! TURN THOSE KNOCKS! lolWhen and why did this stop being the normal fletching/nock orientation? I bought new arrows for the first time in a long time last year and was very confused.
Ive been shooting with a vane at 12 o’clock as long as I’ve been shooting bows. At least 14 years. The odd vane out is from and for bows shooting off a shelf or right up next to the riser. Like trad bows. That create the least amount of interference
You don't have to actually remove the nock fyi. Just twist it to your desired position