No peeps

Maxhunter

Veteran member
Apr 10, 2011
1,432
1,082
Wyoming
I've never personally used one, but I know a few folks that have. Some of the guys loved it and the others switched back to a regular peep within a month. I think it just takes time to get used to them.
 

Rollin

New Member
Feb 20, 2016
8
0
Pennsylvania
I use a kisser button and no peep site. You only need that peep site rubber tube to break one time when drawing back in the field to want to remove it altogether
 

laxwyo

Very Active Member
I've been reading up on them and man are some people entrenched into old ways. Nothing can beat a good peep site etc. my point to them would be, if your anchor is so awesome, you shouldn't need a peep either.

I'm thinking about getting hindsight twilight or Eliminator Pro rear sight if they're still in business
 

mallardsx2

Veteran member
Jul 8, 2015
3,921
3,241
I use a kisser button and no peep site. You only need that peep site rubber tube to break one time when drawing back in the field to want to remove it altogether
I'm with him. Peep sights are for beginners in my opinion.
 

CrimsonArrow

Very Active Member
Feb 21, 2011
854
362
Minnesota
I've been whacking and stacking for a long time, and would never go back to shooting without a peep. I also wouldn't use a peep with the rubber tubing. A peep can keep you consistent while shooting from odd angles or positions.
 

velvetfvr

Veteran member
May 6, 2012
2,026
0
Nv
I think it's more marketing but I wouldn't ditch a peep. Form is most important. Make sure your draw length and everything is setup right and just throw a peep in.
 

velvetfvr

Veteran member
May 6, 2012
2,026
0
Nv
Are you looking for Improving accuracy or just something new?
If it's for accuracy I'd suggest making sure your form and bow are where they need to be. Don't kid yourself because unless you've worked on your form, it couple probably use many improvements. It was hard for me to accept lowering my draw length as it was short to begin with, but my accuracy and confidence grew tremendously after not worrying about 10fps and accepting my true dl.

Secondly I would make sure my bow is in tune. Make sure the brace, ata and poundage measurements are close, they don't have to be exactly factory specs. Then I would bare shaft tune as long as the arrows are indexed to the specs of your bow. This will do more for accuracy than trying the new thing or jumping on a new bandwagon.

Lastly, I don't follow the archery world closely anymore, do any pros use anchor sights? I don't remember any using any in the past.......