I'm afraid you got the throwing distance wrong. The height of the bullseye is five feet and eight inches, you got that correct. However, the throwing distance is seven feet and nine and a quarter inches, and it is taken from the face of the dartboard, not from the wall on which the dartboard hangs. Check up on PDC darts regulations
Bad place to site a dartboard. You get a bad thrower going for double 14, 11, or 8, that bad dart is going to whizz past the side of the house. I wouldn't fancy being someone coming round the corner at that time!!!
The best way to set the footer distance is a tape measure from the bull out at the bull height and then drop a string down with a dart as the weight at 7' 91/4" and mark the position on the ground/floor .
I'm afraid you got the throwing distance wrong.
The height of the bullseye is five feet and eight inches, you got that correct.
However, the throwing distance is seven feet and nine and a quarter inches, and it is taken from the face of the dartboard, not from the wall on which the dartboard hangs.
Check up on PDC darts regulations
Throwing distance is different if using soft tips, its 8ft even..
@@Cuzntime, there are still British Darts Leagues where the throw is an even 8ft.
Just stick the board up relative to the bull being level with tip of your nose. If works if you are average,dwarf or giant height..🤷🏽♂️
in extreme darts its hangin out the car window and slingin one hard at a jogger.
Bad place to site a dartboard. You get a bad thrower going for double 14, 11, or 8, that bad dart is going to whizz past the side of the house. I wouldn't fancy being someone coming round the corner at that time!!!
Isn't the 7' 9" from the bull to ground forward ?
The best way to set the footer distance is a tape measure from the bull out at the bull height and then drop a string down with a dart as the weight at 7' 91/4" and mark the position on the ground/floor .
@@weavostigercat2000 exactly right for getting the throwing distance.🙂