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Recurve Bows

Our recommendation regarding the bow length:

 Body size

 less than 120 cm

 120-135 cm

 135 - 150 cm

 150-160 cm

 161 - 167 cm

 168 - 175 cm

 176 cm +

 Recommended bow length

54"

58"

62"

64"

66"

68"

70"

Basic principle: 
It is better to choose a slightly longer bow, since these are more forgiving about mistakes in the shot process.

Our recommendation regarding the draw weight:

Draw weights:-
Youths up to 12 years – (Men 14 – 20lb) (Women 10 – 16lb)             
People, who rarely do sports – (Men 20 – 28lb) (Women 16 – 24lb)                               
Sporty (men 28 – 32lb) Sporty (women 24 – 28lb)
Very active and sporty (men 32 – 40lb) Sporty (women 28 – 34lb)

Deciding the draw hand

The draw hand is the hand that pulls the string. This means that a right-handed bow is held in the left hand and drawn with the right hand. Determining your personal draw hand has far less to do with whether you are left-handed or right-handed than you might initially assume. It is much more about determining the dominant eye. The dominant eye is used for aiming. This then automatically results in the draw hand.

The term dominant eye refers to the eye whose visual information is superimposed on everything. If a shooter tried to aim with the other eye, he would have to close the dominant eye.

There are two ways of determining the dominant eye: On the one hand, it is the eye that is generally favoured, for example when looking through the viewfinder of a camera, through the peephole or similar situations. On the other hand, there is a small exercise that can be used to determine the dominant eye beyond doubt:

The arms are stretched out and a triangle is formed with the thumbs and index fingers of both hands.
A small target is aimed at through the triangle, for example a socket or a cupboard knob. Focus on this object
The hands are now slowly brought towards the face without taking the target object out of focus.
The triangle of thumb and index fingers will involuntarily tend towards one side of the face and this is where the dominant eye is located.

If the dominance of the eye and hand do not match, the bow should still be selected according to eye dominance. The arms can be easily retrained for the new draw hand, but not the eye.

For more information on recurve archery click here

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