| The No-Peep is an eye
alignment device. There is a lens with a dot. Behind the lens is a
ring. You adjust it so the dot is inside the ring when you are at
your anchor point. The No-Peep will train you to draw to the same
anchor point every time. You just draw your bow while looking at
your sight pins and target. You will see the No-Peep in your
peripheral vision. You just move your head slightly to align the
dot in the ring if it is off. Most of the time it will be aligned
because the No-Peep has trained you like an Olympic archer.
Think of the No-Peep as a visual
kisser button. A lot of bow hunters use a kisser button to
help them anchor consistently. The No-Peep works the same
except it is visual rather than feel. You will be more
accurate and be trained faster because the visual feedback from
the No-Peep is precise compared to a kisser button's feel.
Some bow sights have a front and
rear sight. Like a pistol sight, the front and rear sight are too
close together for accuracy. The optics of the No-Peep magnify
misalignment. Comparing the No-Peep to these other bow sights is
like comparing a scoped rifle to a pistol.
The No-Peep will work with any
type of sight; fixed pins, moveable sight, or pendulum. In fact,
the No-Peep will enhance the accuracy of your pendulum sight. The
reason most people shoot high from a treestand is a change in form
rather than the effects of gravity. Most tend to drop their bow
arm as they aim down. That shortens your draw length. The peep
sight moves up as the string angle changes when the string moves
forward. As little as 1/4” change in draw length can make you
shoot 6”-12” high. A pendulum sight won’t correct for a
change in form. This can’t happen with the No-Peep because it is
attached to the bow, not the string. Your eye will be in the same
position every time.
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