Tag Archives: bow sights

How to Sight In a Compound Bow: 7 Steps to Perfect Pins

Archer at full draw demonstrating how to sight in a compound bow

How to sight in a compound bow in 7 steps: leveling, 20-yard pin, multi-pin spacing, single-pin slider calibration, and the cold-shot test.

Low-Light Bow Sights: Single Pin vs Multi-Pin at Dawn and Dusk

compound bow

When legal shooting light fades, your bow sight stops being a spec-sheet comparison and becomes the deciding factor on whether you draw or let down. Here is how single pin and multi-pin sights actually perform when the woods go grey.

Bow Sight Pin Diameter Explained: How .010, .019, and .029 Pins Change the Single vs Multi-Pin Decision

compound bow pins

Pin diameter quietly drives accuracy and target acquisition speed in every bow sight. Here is how .010, .019, and .029 fiber sizes shift the single pin vs multi-pin decision for compound archers.

Single Pin vs Multi-Pin Bow Sight Durability: Failure Points and Long-Term Care

archery range practice

Single pin vs multi-pin bow sight durability compared — fiber fade, slider gear wear, housing cracks, bubble level drift, and the maintenance schedule that keeps either design hunting for a decade.

Pin Gap Aiming: Multi-Pin Bow Sight Holds That Beat Single Pin Dialing

Multi-pin and single-pin bow sights side by side comparison

The space between multi-pin bow sight pins is not dead zone — it is a built-in half-yardage system most archers never learn to read. Here is how pin gap aiming changes the single pin vs multi-pin debate entirely.

Hybrid Slider Bow Sights: When a Movable Multi-Pin Beats Both Setups

compound bow tournament

Hybrid slider bow sights combine fixed multi-pin speed with movable single-pin precision. Here’s when to choose each, how to set one up correctly, and which configuration matches your shooting discipline.

Bow Sight Setup: Mounting, Calibration, and Yardage Tuning From Scratch

archery sight

A practical bow sight setup guide for compound archers — mounting, centering, second and third-axis calibration, yardage marking, and the maintenance habits that keep your sight true through a full season of shooting.