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New string, shot flight...

Started by NorthernCaliforniaHunter, March 15, 2010, 12:40:00 PM

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NorthernCaliforniaHunter

All I did was change a string! Even added the same silencers in the same position!!

NOW I can't get decent flight to save me. I've tried reducing point weight and even went so far as to switch from 3-under to split-finger shooting. Nothing... And this is using ADTrads which are supposed to be forgiving. WHAT GIVES? Am I going crazy?
"...there are no words that can tell the hidden spirit of the wilderness, that can reveal its mystery, it's melancholy, and its charm." Theodore Roosevelt

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Jerry Wald

Put you old one back on.....is it the same type - same strand - same brace height - same nock point?

jer

NorthernCaliforniaHunter

Well, it looks the same, but I didn't count the threads, etc. The old one blew at the loop and scared the beejeezus out of me.
"...there are no words that can tell the hidden spirit of the wilderness, that can reveal its mystery, it's melancholy, and its charm." Theodore Roosevelt

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Jerry Wald

I always buy two of the same and shoot them in and then put one away.

I have never had a string blow on me but I dry fired mine once - I pulled and must have creeped the arrow off the string and it went off like a shotgun...scared the heck out of me too.

JB

Bjorn

Nock point location and brace height are the main culprits when changing strings. Number of strands does not make that much difference. Also check you bow over carefully, sounds like you had something resembling a dry fire?

Tim Fishell

Like has been said above check the string type, brace height, and nock placement.  I have found that the string type can make a big difference for me.  Also check nock fit on the serving.
Dreams can not be bought; they are free to those who have lived. -Mike Mitten

We must go beyond the textbooks, go out into the untrodden depths of the wilderness & travel & explore & tell the world the glories of our journey

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LBR

All of the above.  The two things that came to my mind first were nock fit and see if the bow was damaged when the other string broke.

If the nock  fits very tight, it can really mess up tuning.

Chad

Ragnarok Forge

Lots of great advice above, let us know how it works out.  Tight nocks make a huge difference in my shooting, I would check that first.
Clay Walker
Skill is not born into anyone.  It is earned thru hard work and perseverance.

NorthernCaliforniaHunter

Thanks guys! I LOVE tradgang!

I'll work the nocks over when I get home, and inspect the bow more carefully. Luckily there was an arrow being pushed when the string snapped. It got off o.k. so I assume the arrow left with most of the bow's energy when the string failed.

I bought two new strings and as a precaution I served the loops. I'll start all over again by baring the shafts I have and seeing if they need a little more off the ends. I did notice the shots got off a bit faster so perhaps that translated into a weaker spine (but I thought that would have improved with a lighter tip, which it didn't...)
"...there are no words that can tell the hidden spirit of the wilderness, that can reveal its mystery, it's melancholy, and its charm." Theodore Roosevelt

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Danny Rowan

By serving the loops you may not have correct nock fit on the tips, just a thought. Check your nocks real well, if you had a string wear out at the nocks you have something abrading the string, not a good thing, may have to sand or file the nocks with a fine nock file.

Danny
"When shooting instinctivly,it matters not which eye is dominant"

Jay Kidwell and Glenn St. Charles

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Retired USCBP Supervisory Officer 1999-2017

Covey

I had a bow that had a burr in the string groove. It would shoot the first few good with the new string and then go to pot. I finally found the culprut and filed it down, no more problems! All bowyers are human, sometimes they might BooBoo!! Just a suggestion, Jason

Jeff Strubberg

You serve the loops on a flemish string?

Maybe it's just me, but that sounds like a recipie for disaster.  Since flemish strings aren't a consistent diameter around the loops, you would have to either be leaving the serving loose over the low spots (the crease between twists), or the peaks where the twist are have to be very, very tight!  

I can even talk myself into an overtight serving cutting that loop...
"Teach him horsemanship and archery, and teach him to despise all lies"          -Herodotus

frank bullitt

Well Jeff, I don't think serving the loop was the problem. It would be pretty tough to serve to tight, threw a small loop by hand, in my oppinion.

Actually, alot of the oldtimers use to serve the necks, to reinforce it. And as Jerry Hill mentions in another post, to tighten up the lower loop on the nock.

NorthernCaliforniaHunter

The culprit was a sharp edge in the string groove. A light touch with a round file corrected that.

Thanks for the input folks!
"...there are no words that can tell the hidden spirit of the wilderness, that can reveal its mystery, it's melancholy, and its charm." Theodore Roosevelt

Find me at ShareTheBounty


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