Greetings All,
When bare shafting, do you want the arrow a little stiff or right on? I'm thinking that with a broadhead (bare shafting with field points),it will soften the shaft a wee bit due to length...
Let me know your thoughts.
Thanks in advance.
Happy hunting,
Jason
I am sure you will get varying opinions, but I like to keep mine slightly weak to compensate for the feathers. Also, for me anyway my shafts with broadheads have a tendancy to fly a bit like they are a wee too stiff if I tune for perfect flight bareshafting.
QuoteOriginally posted by Rick Richard:
I am sure you will get varying opinions, but I like to keep mine slightly weak to compensate for the feathers. Also, for me anyway my shafts with broadheads have a tendancy to fly a bit like they are a wee too stiff if I tune for perfect flight bareshafting.
same here...
I tune them a little weak-leaning left a little-I'm a rightie.
So...how much is too much?
Slight weak here too. The reason being most guys will do the perfect form thing when bare shafting. Expanding real good and all that. But when they start flinging arrows. They don't always get full expansion and exact draw length. They feather has little effect for me because I fletch my bare shaft then trim off the feather leaving the quill glued to your arrow. It will also help in determining if you are having contact with quill on the bow shelf. The main reason is the lack in reaching your full draw length when just flinging arrows around or shot on game. Where I seem guys rush and never get solid anchor are out of position and don't get that full expansion and form perfect.
QuoteOriginally posted by Rigs:
So...how much is too much?
Very slightly, almost to point you can barley tell
I like my bare shafts right in the same group as my fletched at 25-30 yards. If I had to choose, slightly weak (right side of group) and slightly low (nock high) would be preferable to me than anything showing stiff or nock low (bare grouping above fletched).
I have always had the best broadhead flight with both bare and fletched grouping together. I understand the idea of leaving them a little weak in case you short draw in a hunting situation, but if you don't short draw you are shooting a weak shaft and I don't think they shoot as well with broadheads as one that is just right...really splitting hairs here though. As long as you aren't playing with tiny fletching most of us are probably fine with "close enough is close enough"...either way.
Rigs IMO if you get all to group together then that is what I look for, which means that the point weight and spine are correct for your set up being a bareshaft or fletched arrow. Don't over think the which is BETTER weak or stiff.