How Heavy Should My Arrows Be?
#11
RE: How Heavy Should My Arrows Be?
Your in fine shape , if your arrows all hit the same spot . Chuck adams had a great artical on this , know your range and where your arrow is going , a faster set of arrows that arnt as accurate are a big disadvantage . Speed does not equal accuracy . Use a cut on contact quality fixed head and you will be fine , make sure its scary sharp .
Straightarrow is right on .
Ive seen Ted Nugent kill a moose at 50 lbs draw , and a zebra at 55 lbs draw , with magnus 2 blade heads , nither animal went 100 yards after the shot .
Straightarrow is right on .
Ive seen Ted Nugent kill a moose at 50 lbs draw , and a zebra at 55 lbs draw , with magnus 2 blade heads , nither animal went 100 yards after the shot .
#12
RE: How Heavy Should My Arrows Be?
ORIGINAL: JimPic
How's that gum-o-flage taste?If you bought that speed equals power,I know you bought gum-o-flage.
ORIGINAL: MaddSkillz
Speed equals power.
Speed equals power.
#13
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Alabama but live in Maryland
Posts: 438
RE: How Heavy Should My Arrows Be?
hey man i shoot 61lb and the guy that set-up my bow said i need to multiply that by five which gives me 305 grain ,that my arrow can't go below in weight. i shoot a arrow weighing 20 grains over the 305 number and get 299-300 fps which equal somewhere in the ball park of 64 kenetic energy. i think that isenough kenetic energy that kill in animal in north america. seems like you can get good kenetic energy with light or heavy arrows, but with lighter arrow you could get more speed and a flatter trajectory.
#14
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Kodiak, AK
Posts: 2,877
RE: How Heavy Should My Arrows Be?
ORIGINAL: ropedawg
hey man i shoot 61lb and the guy that set-up my bow said i need to multiply that by five which gives me 305 grain ,that my arrow can't go below in weight. i shoot a arrow weighing 20 grains over the 305 number and get 299-300 fps which equal somewhere in the ball park of 64 kenetic energy. i think that isenough kenetic energy that kill in animal in north america. seems like you can get good kenetic energy with light or heavy arrows, but with lighter arrow you could get more speed and a flatter trajectory.
hey man i shoot 61lb and the guy that set-up my bow said i need to multiply that by five which gives me 305 grain ,that my arrow can't go below in weight. i shoot a arrow weighing 20 grains over the 305 number and get 299-300 fps which equal somewhere in the ball park of 64 kenetic energy. i think that isenough kenetic energy that kill in animal in north america. seems like you can get good kenetic energy with light or heavy arrows, but with lighter arrow you could get more speed and a flatter trajectory.
#15
RE: How Heavy Should My Arrows Be?
Pastor,
I think you'll be just fine with what you have.
I rebuttal to a couple of other posts about the peed vs KE argument, I want to say that I am basically a speed freak and I can usually tinker and tweak almost every available fps out of my bows. One reason is a like tinkering and I know how to get the speed.
However, I hunt whitetail deer and it takes little to nothing to blow right through them unless you hit solid bone.
Pastor here is talking about hunting elk, and I would certainly give up some speed to maintain a little more moentum in the arrow. Notice I said momentum, not kinetic energy. I could care less what numbers are achieved with the chronograph and calculator. And the elk doesn't either.
I know this might start some debate, but I'm basing my statements on over 32 years of hunting with compound bows. Back when I shot about a 450 grain arrow at the then average speed of 180-190 fps (get your calculators out boys) and got complete pass throughs on deer then.
There were and still are a lot of guys shooting recurves doing much the same, and on animals as big as elk. With half the KE you guys are discussing.
So my point is that it's nice to know the bow speed and kinetic energy, but losing sleep over it or going out and buging the latest and greatest gadget to gain more doesn't prove a damned thing---especially in the hunting territory.
I think you'll be just fine with what you have.
I rebuttal to a couple of other posts about the peed vs KE argument, I want to say that I am basically a speed freak and I can usually tinker and tweak almost every available fps out of my bows. One reason is a like tinkering and I know how to get the speed.
However, I hunt whitetail deer and it takes little to nothing to blow right through them unless you hit solid bone.
Pastor here is talking about hunting elk, and I would certainly give up some speed to maintain a little more moentum in the arrow. Notice I said momentum, not kinetic energy. I could care less what numbers are achieved with the chronograph and calculator. And the elk doesn't either.
I know this might start some debate, but I'm basing my statements on over 32 years of hunting with compound bows. Back when I shot about a 450 grain arrow at the then average speed of 180-190 fps (get your calculators out boys) and got complete pass throughs on deer then.
There were and still are a lot of guys shooting recurves doing much the same, and on animals as big as elk. With half the KE you guys are discussing.
So my point is that it's nice to know the bow speed and kinetic energy, but losing sleep over it or going out and buging the latest and greatest gadget to gain more doesn't prove a damned thing---especially in the hunting territory.
#16
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location:
Posts: 2,413
RE: How Heavy Should My Arrows Be?
ORIGINAL: ropedawg
i shoot a arrow weighing 20 grains over the 305 number and get 299-300 fps which equal somewhere in the ball park of 64 kenetic energy. i think that isenough kenetic energy that kill in animal in north america.
i shoot a arrow weighing 20 grains over the 305 number and get 299-300 fps which equal somewhere in the ball park of 64 kenetic energy. i think that isenough kenetic energy that kill in animal in north america.
#18
Giant Nontypical
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 9,175
RE: How Heavy Should My Arrows Be?
Go to this link and read everything. Start on the bottom of the page (earliest) and work up the pageto the latest update. Keep in mind that this is work done on the heaviest, toughest animals on earth. An arrow/broadhead that penetrates 15" in a Cape Buffalo isn't even going to slow down when going through a whitetail.
http://tradgang.com/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=forum;f=24
http://tradgang.com/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=forum;f=24
#20
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location:
Posts: 2,413
RE: How Heavy Should My Arrows Be?
Arthur, I'm glad to see you post that link. It's something that every bowhunter should not only read, but study. There's some real good info in there, like the positive results from using extreme FOC, and the effect of tip shape on broadhead dependability. Dr. Ashby already proved that heavy is better - much better, but now he's sheading new light in other areas of arrow/broadhead performance.