Performance difference 70 to 60# limbs
#21
RE: Performance difference 70 to 60# limbs
honestly, if your shooting fine now, i'd leave it alone this close to season. I personally shoot a 500 grain carbon out of my setup, and while the trajectory isnt as good as before, my bow is more quiet, and the difference in momentum is noticeable.
#22
RE: Performance difference 70 to 60# limbs
ORIGINAL: HLTJR
Will going to the axis 400's drop my overall speed? Is this sufficent? Or should I goheavier? But since the season is right around the corner how well do you think the axis 500's that I an shooting will do ?How much does speed really account for? I do have a range finder just bought a leupold rx II camo. Pd 200 for it 100 bucks cheaper than cabelas and bass pro even with shipping added.
Will going to the axis 400's drop my overall speed? Is this sufficent? Or should I goheavier? But since the season is right around the corner how well do you think the axis 500's that I an shooting will do ?How much does speed really account for? I do have a range finder just bought a leupold rx II camo. Pd 200 for it 100 bucks cheaper than cabelas and bass pro even with shipping added.
I would guess that you have enough stuff on your string that it doesn't let the bow transfer enough of it's energy to the arrow, thus the slow speed.
#25
Banned
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: IOWA/25' UP
Posts: 7,145
RE: Performance difference 70 to 60# limbs
These forums have taught me alot. One ofthe biggest facts that I have learned from forums and proshops is that you gain no speed ,or very little with a 70# setup over a 60# setup, due to the heavier arrow weight required from the heavier spined arrow. If you keep the recommended grains per inch per pound, both bows will shoot the same in speed. You only gain more kinetic energy from the 70# arrow but with a 60# setup you are still over 15 ft pounds of the recommended kinetic energy needed for bear, elk, or caribou and over 25 ft pounds of the recommended kinetic energy for a whitetail deer. A 60# bow will kill anything that walks the North American continent. Considering that 90% of all bowhunters will never shoot anything larger than a whitetail deer, these heavy poundage bows are just not necessary. Years ago when bows were not efficient at delivering and producing energy, maybe 70# was a great merit in a bow; but not with these new modern bows. My newest bow, a 29" Guardian peaked at 62#, is shooting my 28" 394 grain A/C/C arrow at 273 fps. Since noise travels at 1128 fps it is way more important to have a bow as quiet as possible IMO. I have never heard a 70# bow shoot as quiet as a 60# bow. Bows also perform the best at their peak weight and so many guys have a 70# bow and have it turned down in poundage and are not getting the full performance from their bow like they could. Bowtechs' engineering dept told me on the phonethat their bows leave the factory at their peak and that a 60# bow peaked out will outperform a 70# bow turned down to 60#. I have seen the light with these 60# bows and will never go back.
http://www.bowhuntinginfo.com/KineticEnergyNew.htm
http://www.bowhuntinginfo.com/KineticEnergyNew.htm
#26
RE: Performance difference 70 to 60# limbs
ORIGINAL: hardcorehunter
These forums have taught me alot. One ofthe biggest facts that I have learned from forums and proshops is that you gain no speed ,or very little with a 70# setup over a 60# setup, due to the heavier arrow weight required from the heavier spined arrow. If you keep the recommended grains per inch per pound, both bows will shoot the same in speed. You only gain more kinetic energy from the 70# arrow but with a 60# setup you are still over 15 ft pounds of the recommended kinetic energy needed for bear, elk, or caribou and over 25 ft pounds of the recommended kinetic energy for a whitetail deer. A 60# bow will kill anything that walks the North American continent. Considering that 90% of all bowhunters will never shoot anything larger than a whitetail deer, these heavy poundage bows are just not necessary. Years ago when bows were not efficient at delivering and producing energy, maybe 70# was a great merit in a bow; but not with these new modern bows. My newest bow, a 29" Guardian peaked at 62#, is shooting my 28" 394 grain A/C/C arrow at 273 fps. Since noise travels at 1128 fps it is way more important to have a bow as quiet as possible IMO. I have never heard a 70# bow shoot as quiet as a 60# bow. Bows also perform the best at their peak weight and so many guys have a 70# bow and have it turned down in poundage and are not getting the full performance from their bow like they could. Bowtechs' engineering dept told me on the phonethat their bows leave the factory at their peak and that a 60# bow peaked out will outperform a 70# bow turned down to 60#. I have seen the light with these 60# bows and will never go back.
http://www.bowhuntinginfo.com/KineticEnergyNew.htm
These forums have taught me alot. One ofthe biggest facts that I have learned from forums and proshops is that you gain no speed ,or very little with a 70# setup over a 60# setup, due to the heavier arrow weight required from the heavier spined arrow. If you keep the recommended grains per inch per pound, both bows will shoot the same in speed. You only gain more kinetic energy from the 70# arrow but with a 60# setup you are still over 15 ft pounds of the recommended kinetic energy needed for bear, elk, or caribou and over 25 ft pounds of the recommended kinetic energy for a whitetail deer. A 60# bow will kill anything that walks the North American continent. Considering that 90% of all bowhunters will never shoot anything larger than a whitetail deer, these heavy poundage bows are just not necessary. Years ago when bows were not efficient at delivering and producing energy, maybe 70# was a great merit in a bow; but not with these new modern bows. My newest bow, a 29" Guardian peaked at 62#, is shooting my 28" 394 grain A/C/C arrow at 273 fps. Since noise travels at 1128 fps it is way more important to have a bow as quiet as possible IMO. I have never heard a 70# bow shoot as quiet as a 60# bow. Bows also perform the best at their peak weight and so many guys have a 70# bow and have it turned down in poundage and are not getting the full performance from their bow like they could. Bowtechs' engineering dept told me on the phonethat their bows leave the factory at their peak and that a 60# bow peaked out will outperform a 70# bow turned down to 60#. I have seen the light with these 60# bows and will never go back.
http://www.bowhuntinginfo.com/KineticEnergyNew.htm
HCH- Great post. I totally agree with everything you said. Unfortunately I was one of those that thought that I needed 70#. I don't know if it is a pride thing or a bragging thing. I had my bow for a month and my groups were staggering and I could only shoot for so long without getting fatigued. So I made a call to my proshop to see if he could order me some 50-60# limbs. He kinda chuckled and said " You should of listened to me to begin with". ( He tried to talk me into the 60# and had all the reasons you had in your post) So I am now shooting 60# and I only lost 10-12fps. My bow is now a blast to shoot.
#27
Guest
Posts: n/a
RE: Performance difference 70 to 60# limbs
ORIGINAL: Straightarrow
I guess it's a matter of the definition of "heavy". To me, 460 grains is medium light. I would never be confortable hunting big game with something that weight.
bigcountry, I'm not trying to nitpick on your weight choice, I just think those reading might benefit from thinking about what really qualifies as performance when it comes to shooting big game.
I guess it's a matter of the definition of "heavy". To me, 460 grains is medium light. I would never be confortable hunting big game with something that weight.
bigcountry, I'm not trying to nitpick on your weight choice, I just think those reading might benefit from thinking about what really qualifies as performance when it comes to shooting big game.
#28
RE: Performance difference 70 to 60# limbs
ORIGINAL: bigcountry
You know straight, never had a problem with light arrows, heavy arrows. Killed dozens with problem there. I think people overthink most of this. I know I used too.
ORIGINAL: Straightarrow
I guess it's a matter of the definition of "heavy". To me, 460 grains is medium light. I would never be confortable hunting big game with something that weight.
bigcountry, I'm not trying to nitpick on your weight choice, I just think those reading might benefit from thinking about what really qualifies as performance when it comes to shooting big game.
I guess it's a matter of the definition of "heavy". To me, 460 grains is medium light. I would never be confortable hunting big game with something that weight.
bigcountry, I'm not trying to nitpick on your weight choice, I just think those reading might benefit from thinking about what really qualifies as performance when it comes to shooting big game.
#29
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location:
Posts: 2,413
RE: Performance difference 70 to 60# limbs
You know straight, never had a problem with light arrows, heavy arrows. Killed dozens of deer without problem there. I think people overthink most of this. I know I used too.
#30
Guest
Posts: n/a
RE: Performance difference 70 to 60# limbs
ORIGINAL: Straightarrow
Guys like yourself are likely to be successful with most setups.
Guys like yourself are likely to be successful with most setups.
but I know what you are saying. Everybody isate up with speed these days. Thats the reason I don't see AMO speeds reported anymore. Which was an ignoredbutimportant number to me And you get to the point where you really got enough speed.
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