This.It's an interesting idea. I never got on with Beiter gauges as I found that if the string touched the gauges then there was too much stiction between the string and the gauge and you could get any reading that you want, and if there was a gap then you get parallax errors.
I'd back it but unfortunately the postage and import duties makes it way too expensive in my opinion. I'd buy a pair in a heartbeat from a local shop for ?20-30 though.
Oh, and as Jon says, it's really not clear if a set is one or two gauges.
Not deliberate. Probably just a cut'n'paste screwup on my phone. It doesn't always take "select all" as a literal instruction...Does a "set" mean a pair? Presumably a minimum you need to align a bow is two forks?
EDIT BTW I don't know if the link in the first post is deliberately broken but this is it - https://www.kickstarter.com/project...rks-tools-for-better-bow-alignmen/description
seriously? that's the sticking point for you? get in and back this, it's a brilliant idea.Oh, and as Jon says, it's really not clear if a set is one or two gauges.
Just curious as to what happens your string jumps out of its grove, does it happen often?When I used them I thought that I would just be confirming that my bow was in alignment, but I ended up being surprised how far out it was. They were very easy to use and I had it straight surprisingly quickly. But does the bow shoot better? That's really hard to say. It certainly wasn't night and day but it did feel a little better. But that may just have been a confidence boost from knowing that it was straight. And a very slight tendency for the string to jump out of its groove disappeared. But I tell you what - the ease of use means that I'd recommend them over any other alignment method even if they are a bit expensive.