How To Use Compound Bow Sights

How to sight in a compound bow for beginners

 

The archery marketplace today has many great archery sights available for compound bows. The sights vary greatly in the features that they offer, from catering to the competitive shooter to the die-hard hunter and everyone in between.

The sights also vary greatly in their price range as well. Once a shooter purchases a new sight, how to use compound bow sights and how to install them on the bow can often be foreign. Here, we’ll discuss how to get a new sight set up on the bow and how to adjust the sight to get it dialed in to a shooter’s preferred distances.

To start, when the new sight is purchased, it will be packaged with all components of the sight itself and any hardware needed to mount the site to the compound bow. After unpacking the new sight, the first step is to install the sight on the bow.

Modern compound bows have a spot on the riser to mount the sight to. The shooter will see the holes on the bow with the threads tapped into them where the sight gets mounted to. Included in the new sight package will be the screws that are required to mount the site. When mounting to the bow, it is important to tighten the screws as tight as possible to prevent any movement of the sight from the mount.

After the sight is mounted on the bow, most archery sights will require the new owner to adjust the housing of the sight. Most sights can be adjusted in distance from the eye, and it is up to the shooters preference on how to set this.

The general rule is that the closer the sight is to the shooters eye, the easier it will be to hold on target but will shoot less accurate. The further the sight head is from the shooters eye, the harder it will be to hold on target, but it will be more accurate.

Next, if the sight comes without the pins installed, the shooter can install them as directed. When lining them up for the first shot, the shooter can easily line up the head of the pin by looking down the arrow shaft while it is nocked and in the rest, adjust the head of the pin to be in line with the arrow and the string. This will provide a great starting point when sighting in.

When first sighting the new sight in, it is important to start close to the target to get the shortest distance pin dialed in. Around 10 yards is a good start. Once a couple of shots are fired, and if not true to aim, the rule is to follow your shot with the pins.

For example, if your shots are high compared to your aiming point, raising the site pin will lower the bow when shooting and bring the shot down. The same follow your shot with the pin rule is true for left and right adjustments as well.

The final step in learning how to use compound bow sights after getting the shortest distance pin set up is adding more pins for different yardages beyond the close-up pin.

When looking to add distance, the shooter needs to determine what distances they want to include with their available pins and work their way out to further distances with each pin. The close-up shot pin will be the top pin in the sight. Further distances will be the pins moving down from there.

With a little trial and error, you can catch on pretty quickly by observing your shot placement for the distance you want to set your pins to and making micro adjustments as needed.

For more information, you can check out another helpful post here.

Best 2018 Compound Bow Sights

 

Compound bow sights have seen many advancements over the years and as we move into 2018, the new sights that are hitting the market are amazing. The new advancements in the technology of the sights have made them easier to use, easier to dial in and easier to install as the shooter making the compound bow more a more efficient tool in the shooter’s arsenal. Here, we will review the best 2018 compound bow sights that are on the market now.

Garmin Xero A1i

Garmin storms on the bow sight scene with the technologically advanced Xero A1i sight. The Xero A1i features a new unique feature to archery sights: a completely digital sight that has the ability to measure the distance to the target. The sight features a single-button trigger on the rangefinder that allows the shooter to calculate distances while at full-draw for game animals out to 100 yards. This amazing sight also features a Laser Locate system that allows a compatible Garmin GPS device to know where the target was located when the shot was taken, helping hunters specifically to eliminate the guesswork on where to begin looking for their animal on a tracking job.

IQ Define

The IQ Define bow sight hits the market being a five-pin sight with a built-in rangefinder. The rangefinder on the sight features a one-touch button to calculate the range of the target while at full draw. Yardage is displayed on an OLED display that faces the shooters eye while drawn or holding the bow in hand. The five pins come with multi-colored fiber optics and a level sits at the bottom of the circles that houses the pins and rangefinder.

Elite Archery EX5

Elite Archery has been putting out great archery equipment for a while and the new EX5 site is nothing short of a fine product from the company. The EX5 is a five-pin sight that features the Armed Guard fiber management system to ensure the brightest pins possible with 12” of fiber concealed in the routing system to the pins. The sight also features a removable light shade to enhance pin brightness. Elite’s Smart Mount system gives the shooter multiple mounting holes to position the sight correctly on their bow. The EX5 also enables the shooter to make micro adjustments to the pins for wind and elevation adjustments.

Apex Gear Covert

The Apex Gear Covert sight in the four pin model allows shooters to use the sight as both a fixed pin sight while giving them the ability to unlock the sight and use as a moving sight to dial it in on specific distances. Smooth adjustments on the sight can be made with one hand while in the field. To help a new shooter who sets the AX5 up on their bow, the sight comes with over 120 pre-marked yardage tapes for different bow models and shooting speeds to help get the bow dialed in.

Hoyt PRO XCEED

Among the best 2018 compound bow sights for shooters that prefer a single-pin sliding sight, the Hoyt PRO XCEED features a coiled fiber optic strand on the pin, making it highly visible during daylight hours. A sight light is available on the sight as well to help light things up in low light conditions of the morning or evening hours. The PRO XCEED also comes available to shooters with pre-printed sight tapes on the quick-adjust slider. The slider also features a micro-adjust for wind and elevation. A rainbow of colored sight rings come with the new PRO XCEED as well for the shooter to interchange to their preference.