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“Después del primer mes usando los análisis biomecánicos del sitio, pude ajustar el ángulo de mi codo de cuerda y la dispersión en la diana a 50 metros se redujo en un 12%. No esperaba un cambio tan concreto en tan poco tiempo.”
Carlos M.
Arquero de competición, Club de Tiro con Arco Sierra Norte
Carlos aplicó las recomendaciones sobre el vector de fuerza y la alineación del torso durante la fase de anclaje. Su entrenador confirmó la mejora en la consistencia de la suelta tras revisar los datos de captura de movimiento del artículo sobre tensión de cuerda.
Revisión publicada el 12 de marzo de 2025. El usuario autorizó la reproducción de su experiencia.
Review
A focused review built around practical decisions and constraints.
When I first contacted the team, I wasn’t looking for a generic analysis. I needed someone who understood the specific geometry of a compound bow setup — the cable tension, the tiller balance, and how the release aid interacts with the string at full draw. The initial call lasted forty minutes, and we spent most of it talking about my current anchor point and the angle of my bow hand.
The setup review they sent back was not a template. It included a table with my measured draw length, peak weight, and the calculated vector deviation at full draw. They pointed out that my string hand was rotating 4° inward during the last centimeter of travel, which introduced a lateral force component that explained a consistent 2 cm drift at 50 meters. That level of detail is what I had been missing from other sources.
The communication during the adjustment phase was direct. They sent me three short video clips showing the correction drill, each one under two minutes. No fluff, no motivational speech. Just a clear instruction: reposition the elbow, check the shoulder alignment, and repeat the draw cycle with a metronome at 80 bpm. I followed it for two weeks, and the group on the target tightened noticeably.
What I appreciated most was the honesty about tradeoffs. They told me that changing the anchor point would reduce stability for the first few sessions, and that the new string tension would feel stiffer until my proprioception adapted. That kind of upfront explanation made the process feel collaborative rather than prescriptive. I knew what to expect, so I didn’t second-guess the method.
This is not a review about a product or a subscription. It’s about a service that treated my bow and my body as a single system. The feedback loop was tight, the language was precise, and the results came from concrete adjustments, not from vague encouragement. If you are a coach or a competitive archer who wants to understand the mechanics behind the shot, this is the kind of dialogue that actually moves the needle.
— Review from a club-level archer, after completing a remote biomechanical assessment.