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canting your bow, is it bad???

Started by $bowhunter$, February 02, 2011, 10:02:00 PM

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$bowhunter$

ive always canted my recurve since as long as ive been shootig.ive never noticed a bad accuracy effect. will this hurt my accuracy in the future?

thanks,
steven
"SHOOT STRAIT" - something im still working twards

Stumpkiller

Shouldn't.  I do notice if I lay the bow almost flat it puts my arrow higher - probably due to the difference in shelf vs. riser pad.
Charlie P. }}===]> A.B.C.C.

Bear Kodiak & K. Hunter, D. Palmer Hunter, Ben Pearson Hunter, Wing Presentation II & 4 Red Wing Hunters (LH & 3 RH), Browning Explorer, Cobra II & Wasp, Martin/Howatt Dream Catcher, Root Warrior, Shakespeare Necedah.

dragon rider

No.  As long as you do the same thing from shot to shot it won't hurt at all.  If you start varying the cant from shot to shot it'll mess you up, but keep it the same and you'll be fine.
Don't meddle in the affairs of dragons; people are crunchy and taste good with ketchup.

TGMM Family of the Bow

sagebrush

I practice with mine in all different positions, even laying down. I have never noticed any difference in canting the bow. The shelves on all my bows are very close to my hand though. Gary

I need to vary the cant all the time when shooting game.  It is part of being prepared for a multiple of situations when hunting.  With a longbow and probably any bow, canting more when shooting down helps keep the arrow on target. Hunting does not allow very often the chance to control everything in the situation, that is was makes it a challenge.  Hunting and your back yard are not the same.

champ38

As long as my alignment is good, cant doesnt seem to matter much.
56" Shrew Classic Carbon 68@29
58" 2-P Centaur Cabon Elite 57@29

PAPA BEAR

i keep mine at around 1:00 to 1:30 every shot.
IT'S NEVER WRONG TO DO WHATS RIGHT AND NEVER RIGHT TO DO WHATS WRONG.....LOU HOLTZ

Mike Bolin

I have a pretty strong cant, but I practice with the bow straight up and different degrees of cant. I had to pass up a shot on a bull caribou in '99 because the brush I was hiding in wouldn't allow me to cant my bow. Came to full draw, but the shot didn't feel right so I passed on it. Depending on the length of bow I am shooting, I have to cant my bow a bit more than usual when hunting out of pop up blind. Mike
Bodnik Quick Stick 60", 40#@28"
Osage Selfbow 62", 47#@28
Compton Traditional Bowhunters

sagebrush

Another shot to try, backwards cant. Lay on your left side (if you're right handed) and shoot. Your fingers will hold the arrow on the shelf. Gary

The backwards cant is a good for shooting out trees when the shot is more to the bow side than planned.

PowDuck

QuoteOriginally posted by sagebrush:
Another shot to try, backwards cant. Lay on your left side (if you're right handed) and shoot. Your fingers will hold the arrow on the shelf. Gary
I always liked to show compound shooters how the arrow will stay on the shelf with a reverse cant once I get to 1/2 - 3/4 draw.
I cant the bow however I feel like depending on brush etc.
Romans 8:28

Txnrog

I have about a 45 degree natural cant - it just feels right when I rotate my elbow out. Get a few comments, but doesn't seem to effect accuracy with most bows. Some off-center bows are a little more picky if I vary the cant a couple degrees.


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