depends on if your right or left handed, right handed the neck
precision instrument: caliper, micrometer non-precision measuring instrument: your hand, a piece of string
If you have a left handed bow, then you probobly would be left handed anyway, so you would pull the string back with your right hand.
The piano can belong to two different instrument families, this is due to the way the sound is produced. It can be considered a percussion instrument because it uses a mallet to hit a string to produce the sound. On the other hand, it can be considered a string instrument because a vibrating string is what actually produces the sound.
wanks
It depends on whether you're stringing it for left handed or right handed usage. No matter what hand you use, the strings should go from thickest to thinnest. For right hands, the thickest string should be on the far left side of the neck, and gradually getting thinner as it goes towards the right. For left hands, the thickest string should be on the far right side, and get thinner as it moves left across the neck.
behind the left hand side of the instrument panel at the left hand side of the steering column
The answer would have to be "the wrong kind", a right handed user pulls the string with his/her right hand and has the shelf on the LEFT, whereas a left handed user (such as yourself) pulls the string with his/her left hand and needs the arrow shelf on the RIGHT. As a real archer with three years of experience with various bows (st the time of writing), I know for certain that bows should never have the shelf on the wrong side.
a left hand guitar with his right hand pretty awesome!!
Left hand side of instrument panel, at the left hand side of the steering column.
You shoot with your left hand. When your on the right side you shoot with your right hand, this way you have a better chance at getting then ball in and getting fouled. The trick that always worked for me is that when your going up for a layup on the left side pretend there is a string connected to your left hand and left knee.
no, there is no way to do this the arrow rest is on opposite sides of the bow
Hand on String was created on 2006-02-14.