If there is one thing true about sighting in a bow sight, it’s that there is more than one way to skin a cat. I recently acquired the Spot Hogg Fast Eddie 5-Pin and had to of course get it all sighted in and ready for season. While I was doing this, my buddy was also tackling the same task with the same sight and had some questions. So, I figured if he had questions, there are others that do too. Naturally, I decided to make a video of the process, as I think this is way easier to digest visually than through reading.
The video down below is going to go through the process I go through every single time when I sight in a multi-pin slider bow sight. The only thing that really changes from sight to sight is how certain companies recommend going about picking the right sight tape. Some have a calibration type or system like the Spot Hogg does, and some simply go off of your bow speed. Other than that small portion of this, everything else is the same and you can use what I talk about here with any multi-pin slider bow sight.
Like I said, there is more than one way to skin a cat and this way down below has worked perfectly well for me throughout the years. I can shoot well past 100 yards doing things like this and, in my opinion, this method avoids potential setbacks in your sight-in, hence the very first step. Watch and you’ll understand. Enjoy!
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