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Should I shoot wood arrows?

Started by Chain2, January 07, 2012, 02:36:00 PM

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Chain2

I ahve a Howard Hill Wesley Special, 50 lbs @ 30 ", I draw almost 32". I have been having some issues with it. I am working thru those with the help of you guys here . Thank you. I have been having arrow issues, including buying soem that were too short. I have went back to the GT 55/75's I started shooting after determining my new MFX 400's were too short. They are flying better than they were before, I am now shooting a 250 gr tip rather than the 125gr tip I started with. Should I just say the heck with it and try wood arrows? I guess sooner or later I will be there anyway. My concerns are my drawlength and thwe durability. Thank you
"Windage and elevation Mrs. Langdon, windage and elevation..."

Bjorn

These days wood comes 32" which will make a 31" arrow. You could bend your elbow like Howard did to shorten your draw. You could buy footed arrows to get them longer and you could use reparrows which is a way less expensive footing and equally good. Do a search for reparrows.

lpcjon2

Some people live an entire lifetime and wonder if they have ever made a
difference in the world, but the Marines don't have that problem.
—President Ronald Reagan

instinctivebowman

Geez.  Thats a long draw? i could prob send you an arrow to try at no cost.  and if its work for ya i can either build some for you, or help you get what you need from a dealer like 3 rivers etc. i prob wont ever shoot anything but wood myself, i fell in love with whole process a long ago

pm if your interseted

Jeremy

bolong

bolong

primitivealltheway

find someone who can make real good bamboo arrows ,they are tapered ,plus i have seen them 36" long as arrows.then go get you some cane and look around on the do it yourself threads and it will show you how to do it,
on the plus side you get arrows you can shoot and also something to go by,ive made some bamboo arrow 3 of them ,it takes some work to get them right ,but boy are they tough,you can get some 30" and put a hard wood dowel 3 inches in the front .tough ,tough tough..
"nothing like being in the woods with a stick and string"

primitivealltheway

also it may just be me ,but i think wood arrows hit harder ,thinking that it sokes up the energy from the bow ,more than carbons do.IMHO...
"nothing like being in the woods with a stick and string"

The Whittler


instinctivebowman

QuoteOriginally posted by Bjorn:
These days wood comes 32" which will make a 31" arrow. You could bend your elbow like Howard did to shorten your draw. You could buy footed arrows to get them longer and you could use reparrows which is a way less expensive footing and equally good. Do a search for reparrows.
x2 on this one, bjorn probably said it about perfect. i can get you to about 31 and 1/4" is all i can stretch it out if you want a sample arrow.

longbowray

And remember with a long draw you will a 70/75 shaft .
BOWHUNTTER FOR LIFE

mikebiz

Are you sure you are measuring your draw length accurately?  That seems very long.  How tall are you?
"...and last of all I leave to you the thrill of life and the joy of youth that throbs a moment in a well bent bow, then leaps forth in the flight of an arrow." - Saxton Pope

MarkE2006

'10 Howard Hill Wesley Special 70" 45@28; '09 Turkey Creek 62" 55@28; '09 Brush Country Wasp II 64" 54@28; '07 Turkey Creek Dbl Carbon 64" 56@28; '64 Wing Red Wing Hunter 58" 38@28; '62 Wing Red Wing Hunter 58" 50@28

lpcjon2

He had it measured at a archery shop. I am 6'3" and my drawis 31-32" depending on the bend of my bow arm.
Some people live an entire lifetime and wonder if they have ever made a
difference in the world, but the Marines don't have that problem.
—President Ronald Reagan

bentpole

Longbows and Wood   :thumbsup:  perfect together!  :archer2:

Chain2

I just had my wife mark an arrow at mthe front of the riser whenI am at full draw. Frow the string point of the nock to the mark was 31 1/2". I think I have enought bend in my arm, I haven't slapped my wrist with a string in a long time, if that is any indicator. Thank you
"Windage and elevation Mrs. Langdon, windage and elevation..."

lpcjon2

I remember a company from Texas I think that was making arrows longer than most arein length. I think they were from lodgepole or something. They had an add that was a fense post with arrows stuck in it.I know someone has to remember that company add.

And at 31 1/2 surewoods will work great for you. just taper them and you will be good.
Some people live an entire lifetime and wonder if they have ever made a
difference in the world, but the Marines don't have that problem.
—President Ronald Reagan

Fletcher

Good judgement comes from experience.  Experience comes from bad judgement.

"The next best thing to playing and winning is playing and losing."

"An archer doesn't have to be a bowhunter, but a bowhunter should be an archer."

Stiks-n-Strings

Nothin' better than woodies. My first came from Fletcher. Still shooting them after two years along with dozens of others    :D

Wood arrows are like bows, you just cant have enough
Striker stinger 58" 55# @ 28
any wood bow I pick off the rack.
2 Cor. 10:4
TGMM Family of The Bow
MK, LLC Shareholder
Proud Member of the Twister Twelve

snag

Isaiah 49:2...he made me a polished arrow and concealed me in his quiver.

OkKeith

Chain2,

I love wood arrows. I like to build them and I like to shoot them. I have a 31.5 to 32 inch draw as well (depending on which of my bows I'm shooting). I foot most of my wood arrows with three inches or so of alum. arrow both for strength and to add some length.

As much as I love wood arrows, I don't hunt with them any more. Regardless of how pricey and of high quality my shafts are, and even if I use the utmost care in constructing them; no wood arrow will ever match the durability and consistancy of a carbon shaft.

I still shoot wood shafts for the enjoyment of them. Some of the 3D tournaments I shoot require them for certian catagories. But... when it comes to hunting and making a clean, quick kill is on the line, I prefer the carbon shafts.

OkKeith
In a moment of decision the best thing you can do is the right thing. The worst thing you can do is nothing.
Theodore Roosevelt


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