rdnkgrl_robinhood
09-25-2010, 12:06 PM
I am looking for some installation instructions for a SPOT HOGG WHAMMY rest. If anybody has one that they could copy and send to me via email that would be awesome. Or if you happen to have a LINK that I could go to or something.
Let me know.. Thanks all:peace:
Allen
09-25-2010, 02:46 PM
The Whammy cord is attached to the cable that goes UP when you are drawing your bow. There is a sweet spot for this on the cable. Mine seem to work best about 8 inches down.
Tension the cord so that the trigger is tight against the rest housing, then back it off about to about 1/16" to 1/8". You will use this to adjust the timing of the drop.
Spray powder on the prongs of the rest. Put enough slack in the cord so that your fletching brushes some of the powder off, then tighten it in very small increments until there is no more fletching contact. This is where the prongs are getting out of the way slightly ahead of the fletching.
Most archers will leave it here, but if you are obsessive compulsive about your tuning you can use group tuning to adjust the cord in very tiny increments for the best groups. Of course other tuning adjustments come into play, so this can be an involved process and usually not worth your time unless you just enjoy that sort of stuff.
Hope this helps,
Allen
rdnkgrl_robinhood
09-26-2010, 07:36 PM
The Whammy cord is attached to the cable that goes UP when you are drawing your bow. There is a sweet spot for this on the cable. Mine seem to work best about 8 inches down.
Tension the cord so that the trigger is tight against the rest housing, then back it off about to about 1/16" to 1/8". You will use this to adjust the timing of the drop.
Spray powder on the prongs of the rest. Put enough slack in the cord so that your fletching brushes some of the powder off, then tighten it in very small increments until there is no more fletching contact. This is where the prongs are getting out of the way slightly ahead of the fletching.
Most archers will leave it here, but if you are obsessive compulsive about your tuning you can use group tuning to adjust the cord in very tiny increments for the best groups. Of course other tuning adjustments come into play, so this can be an involved process and usually not worth your time unless you just enjoy that sort of stuff.
Hope this helps,
Allen
Thanks a lot I really appreciate it