That certainly seemed to be the case with my Tac 15 arrows. Your arrows are carrying a lot of kinetic energy too so if you had something hard you can drive the tip up into the shaft.Īnd I think with a 400 fps bow eventually arrows are going to start getting tired from all that flexing and impacts on both the front and back ends. Most people are shooting around 400 grain arrows. I think for the 400 it's 375 grains (check before you buy). There's some text on top of your stock forearm that tells you the minimum weight. You have to be careful what you shoot in terms of spine (essentially flex) and weight, where the vanes are attached, weight etc. So maybe when you do another 8-10 clicks to the left it'll get you zeroed.Īrrows may be the trickiest part about crossbows. I suppose that when the scope left the factory for some reason the scope adjustment could have been turned or assembled so it shot too far right. If it's a problem with the scope you do have an excellent warranty.Ĭheck it over and make sure everything is tight. If you've used the full lateral adjustment of your scope and now the arrow (or arrows) are impacting in the same spot time after time and you can't adjust further left something else is going on.Ĭlick to expand.I just noticed you said you have the pro-package so the Hawke scope. Some people have commented that their weights and lengths vary somewhat.īut this does not sound like an arrow issue. Unless Mission/Victory has changed something their arrows are not spine checked and indexed. Some custom arrows shoot close to the same point of impact arrow after arrow because the are spine tested and indexed. With any arrow you'll get the most repeatable results by shooting the same arrow repeatedly. Canting wouldn't account for a 10 inch to-the-right impact but will have some effect. And when you're shooting you should try to insure you're not canting the bow. At some point you should insure the crosshairs of your scope are level with the limbs of your bow and level with the upper surface of your rail.įor sighting in purposes you could get by with putting the bow on some kind of support (bi-pod?)and leveling the limbs (laying a 3 foot carpenter,s level them works)and with them level then rotating the scope so that when the limbs are level so is the horizontal line in your scope. ![]() Keep both the front of the bow and the butt end as stable (unmoving during release) as you can. I usually use a tri-pod but sandbags work well also. I think the best way to sight in a crossow is off a solid rest. You can contact your Mission dealer and he'll take care of it, or you could contact Hawke directly. If it's one of the Hawkes that come in the Mission package they have an excellent warranty. ![]() If you adjusted as far to the left as you could and can't go any further it sounds like a scope issue. If you checked over your bow and especially your scope mounting attachments and when you first shot it you were 10" to the right that may been simply because of the way your scope was put together. Click to expand.You have not mentioned whether or not you got it zeroed in so I'm curious.
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