PEEP SIGHT PRECISION- The visual key to archery. Week 6 School of Nock 25.
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- Опубликовано: 10 фев 2025
- The peep sight has a huge impact on accuracy. The secret to it is to pretend it’s not there until the time is right! Although this amazing little device is your key to unlocking new levels in archery, but it’s also the one thing that can deny you access just as fast! Many people prioritize the peep at the wrong time. That is a bad mistake! In this video John Dudley tell you why the peep needs to be seen correctly when the time is right!
Thank you Dudley for all of these videos over the years that give us a system for improvement and consistency. Please keep them coming. 🤘🏼
Great reminders! Thanks for always putting out these videos on fundamentals
This is why I prefer a pin that floats inside a housing instead of a moving housing. I center the housing in my peep with every shot, not the pin. I might not be able to shoot super long 3d shots past 70 yards, but my anchor and peep view does not change when shooting out to 70.
Let's go! 🏹🤘🏻
Hey Dud, so what do you say in comparison to how George Ryals explains peep/anchor and shots at distance? I am by no means trying to start any issue, but he seems to say that peep alignment is everything and it will change your anchor, but that's OK.
I was gonna comment the same thing George ryals says the complete opposite of what dudly says
I’m gonna go with George on this one, Chris Bee shot a bow with probably a 31 inch draw in ultra views channel and inside out a 10 ring just by looking down the peep, actually insane to watch
I think they’re both ultimately saying the same thing. Peep alignment has to be perfect. They simply vary on the process of getting there.
The way I understand it in simple terms. GRIV says, peep alignment needs to be perfect, if your peep alignment is perfect, anchor doesn’t really matter. Dud says, peep alignment needs to be perfect, it’s easier to get perfect peep alignment with a consistent anchor. Both are right
@@brockkirian3837 Wrong....
George is right on this one. do a scale drawing, of eye, peep, front sight, impact point @ 20yds then do the same with impact point point at 100yds.....notice anything???
One thing I wanted to comment on that no one talks about is the relationship between anchor and the design of the release. Look at the carters. There is a lot of material between the index and middle finger. Now look at the truball hbc. There is very little material between the index and middle finger. So when you grab the release you anchoring fingers will be spread more in the Carter vs the truball.
Say when you anchor. The Carter will feel as if your anchor don’t change or move at longer distances because of the large gap between fingers around jaw bone. But on the truball the gap being smaller if you shooting 100yds. You will “feel” your anchor change more and feel out of place because you have a “tighter” anchor because of the narrow gap between index and middle finger.
My anchor always feels easier/ more solid with a Carter that is does with my truball releases. Because of what I mentioned about. Your test it out for yourself… I’m not saying this cause I’m a Carter fan boy. But you can feel this between any of the releases that have more material between the index and middle finger on a handheld release.
Do you need a good set of strings? ;)
Dudley 2028!
Totally opposite from what George Ryals teaches. So interesting.