PARA Tactile Archery Sight — Visually Impaired (VI)
Custom-built to World Archery PARA equipment requirements. Made to order.
PARA VI tactile sight at an outdoor competition range.
What is a PARA tactile sight?
Visually impaired (VI) archers compete under World Archery's PARA classification system using a tactile reference device in place of a conventional sight. The archer contacts a fixed point on the stand — typically with the back of the hand or a defined face reference — to establish a consistent, repeatable aiming position on every shot.
Axial builds custom tactile sight rigs designed and dimensioned to meet World Archery PARA VI equipment rules. Each unit is built to the archer's measurements and bow setup — height, draw length, anchor position, and contact preference.
What's included
- Adjustable tripod-base frame for ground stability
- Height-adjustable vertical post and crossbar assembly
- Padded tactile contact point, positioned and covered to the archer's preference
- Clamp and locking hardware for repeatable setup
- Built and verified against the archer's actual stance and draw before delivery
Priced to order — contact us for a quote.
Every unit is different because every archer is different. Draw length, anchor, stance, and contact point all factor into the build. The process starts with a short intake to collect your measurements.
To inquire or order:
Email [email protected] with your name, bow setup, draw length, and a brief description of your competition level or intended use. We'll follow up with questions and a quote.
Built to current World Archery PARA equipment specifications. If your federation uses modified rules or local equipment standards, include that detail in your inquiry.
