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Clicker Training for Recurve Archers

The clicker is a thin metal spring mounted on the riser that the arrow tip passes through during the draw. When the arrow pulls past the clicker, it falls and makes a "click" sound — the signal to release. It is a critical draw-length consistency device used by virtually every competitive Olympic recurve archer.

What the Clicker Does

The clicker solves two problems simultaneously: it ensures every arrow is drawn to exactly the same length, and it provides a non-visual release trigger. Instead of watching your sight pin and deciding when to release, you draw until the clicker falls and your fingers open reflexively. This removes much of the target-panic-inducing conscious decision from the release.

Are You Ready for a Clicker?

Most coaches recommend waiting until an archer has developed consistent back tension and a reproducible draw before adding a clicker. If you can't draw consistently to the same anchor, the clicker will be frustrating rather than helpful. As a general guide, recurve archers shooting at a club level for 6–12 months with consistent form are typically ready.

How to Set Up and Train with a Clicker

  1. Set the clicker position: Draw to your full anchor on a blank bale. Have someone mark where the arrow tip sits on the riser. Install the clicker 1–2mm beyond that point.
  2. Train at blank bale first: Practice drawing through the clicker at close range until you can consistently get it to fall within 3–5 seconds using back tension — not by reaching forward.
  3. Never reach forward: The most common clicker training error is pushing the bow arm forward to make the clicker fall. This breaks bow arm alignment. The correct technique is expanding the draw through the back until the arrow clears.
  4. Gradually move back: Only add distance when the clicker is falling consistently from back expansion, not arm movement.

Ready to Add a Clicker?

Book a session with Lalit Jain to get properly set up and trained on using a clicker effectively.

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