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Discussion Starter · #1 ·
Hi all, new to the forum and new to shooting. I started about 2 months ago and basically went in and bought my first slingshot off of Amazon, a simple Chinese pinch grip slingshot. After about a week shooting a homemade janky catch box I made, I went and bought some GZK band making stuff... and also 3 more slingshots.. :) reading all of the advice on here i made my first set of bands opting to go with a 12-7mm just to try out with some 3/8 ammo. Having a good time with these bands (if anybody has any suggestions on other taper sizes, much appreciated). Then out of nowhere I got me a SS Hammer xt just because.. I know some must be thinking I went in deep too fast,but I couldn't help it!
ANYWAYS, to the question at hand, I started out twisting my pouch 90° so thumbnail to cheek and I use my middle and thumb to grip, and its very comfortable to me but band aligning is confusing do to the bands twisting, made the decision to shoot without the twist. Accuracy has increased due to the alignment but now I'm having ligament pain in my wrist and thumb.. I'd like to twist the pouch again, but aiming with the band twist I can't align as good. Any tips on aiming this way? I've searched the forum for answers but I couldn't quite find any specifics with aligning bands while twisting.
Sorry for the rant.
-Say
 

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Welcome! And you are not going to be the first to jump off the deep end as soon as you get hooked on slingshots.

Have the same issues with bands I was worried about the twist, as long as you do it the same way every time the twist shouldn't make any difference. As far as lining up the Bands I shoot with both eyes open which allows me to see the top band covering the bottom band. With the twist it won't be a perfect cover top to bottom bands but as long as you get the Bands one on top of the other you will do just fine. The most important part of accuracy is getting that release perfect and the same every time. If you find something comfortable that feels good that is going to be the most important thing to increasing your accuracy.

When I switch to shooting tubes all that became very easy, since the tubes are round it's very easy to get the two tubes stacked on top of each other. When I go back to bands now it's a little awkward because it's not that perfect stacking.

Cheers
 

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Discussion Starter · #8 ·
Thank you all! Thanks for the advice, I'm cross eyed dominant, left eye right handed and I hold ss in left. I read that I SHOULD switch hands, but I also shoot a bow like this so I'm kind of use to it.

I'm for sure going to have more questions in the near future, and I'm rebuilding my catch box with a few extra things so I'll probably post that too!
 

· aka CYBORG
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1,866 Posts
' ... twisting my pouch 90° so thumbnail to cheek and I use my middle and thumb to grip...

I grip thumb & index (no twist) ... tried a half dozen dry draws using thumb & middle finger grip with and without twist ... felt uncomfortable pains back of my hand and wrist. :iono:
 

· Ray Rowden
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This is a recent development for me, but probably as old as slingshooting.

When shooting marbles these days, I usually grip the ammo, not the pouch. Without twisting this aligns my hand in the same orientation as holding the pouch and twisting.

The Chinese shooters call this grip "Shanghai" or just "Hai" style. It's popular with the speed shooters.

Thought I'd toss this into the mix for what it's worth!
 

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This is a recent development for me, but probably as old as slingshooting.

When shooting marbles these days, I usually grip the ammo, not the pouch. Without twisting this aligns my hand in the same orientation as holding the pouch and twisting.

The Chinese shooters call this grip "Shanghai" or just "Hai" style. It's popular with the speed shooters.

Thought I'd toss this into the mix for what it's worth!
I've tried a few times but just haven't found the right pouches to use. Let's just say that I've had a few shots with a "high pucker factor"!
 

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Was wondering exactly this lately ... I've been watching alot of Nathan's video's and noticed he always rotates the pouch 90° so his 4 knuckles are horizontal (instead of 4 knuckles being vertical like my hold). For a 30-32" common draw length, is there any perceptible advantage to rotating the pouch 90° (I notice I get more band slap & seem to have a harder time getting a consistent anchor point with a rotated/twisted pouch).... thanks !
 

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Was wondering exactly this lately ... I've been watching alot of Nathan's video's and noticed he always rotates the pouch 90° so his 4 knuckles are horizontal (instead of 4 knuckles being vertical like my hold). For a 30-32" common draw length, is there any perceptible advantage to rotating the pouch 90° (I notice I get more band slap & seem to have a harder time getting a consistent anchor point with a rotated/twisted pouch).... thanks !
Just thought I'd throw this question out there one more time if anybody could help with any advantage to twisting the pouch ... thx all !
 

· Registered
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Was wondering exactly this lately ... I've been watching alot of Nathan's video's and noticed he always rotates the pouch 90° so his 4 knuckles are horizontal (instead of 4 knuckles being vertical like my hold). For a 30-32" common draw length, is there any perceptible advantage to rotating the pouch 90° (I notice I get more band slap & seem to have a harder time getting a consistent anchor point with a rotated/twisted pouch).... thanks !
Just thought I'd throw this question out there one more time if anybody could help with any advantage to twisting the pouch ... thx all !
No advantage or disadvantage. Shoot what works for you.
 
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