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How does one decide what weight broadheads to use?

Started by caihlen, January 26, 2012, 05:58:00 PM

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caihlen

Hello all,

I'm curious how one concludes what weight broadhead to shoot.  I assume that you would take into account the weight of the field points you practice with but other I also suspect that there is more to it than that.  Thanks in advance for any information.

Ken Campbell
Ferndale, Montana

wtpops

You use what ever weight tunes the arrow best to the bow, or you can pick a weight and pick and tune an arrow spine to that weight head. If you have your bow tuned already with a arrow and tip weight then that tip weight you have is the same broad head weight you would use, if you change the weight to much it will throw off your tune.
TGMM Family of the Bow
"OVERTHINKING" The art of creating problems that weren't even there!

Trumpkin the Dwarf

Ken,
I tune my arrows with field tips and then match my broadhead to that weight. Where is Ferndale? I have lived in Montana most of my life and don't know where that is located...
Malachi C.

Black Widow PMA 64" 43@32"

Rob DiStefano

with carbons and alums, this is fairly easy, since the points and adapters are so weight tweakable.  it's more about finding out what arrow length, spine and mass weight best for a particular bow and you.  the goal is to achieve great arrow flight.  then remove the point and replace with a similar weight broadhead.  then retest for flight.  adjust as need be.  it's not rocket science and going a tad heavier won't matter much - better heavier than lighter.
IAM ~ The only government I trust is my .45-70 & my Ol' Brown Bess

Bill Carlsen

When I tune my set up I bare shaft with various point weights until I get the weight/spine that is perfect. Then I adapt my broadhead weight to the bare shaft (I use Razorcaps which are weight adjustable). Has always worked for me in terms of getting the best flight from my broadheads.
The best things in life....aren't things!

Charlie Lamb

I chose the broadhead I like then by using different adapters, inserts or spine of shaft achieve tune.
Hunt Sharp

Charlie

Reaper TN

TT Pinnacle II  45# 62"
Hoyt Excel  50# 64"

Terry Lightle

Compton Traditional Bowhunters Life Member

sweeney3

As heavy as I can get in a style that I like from a source I like and that I can tune to my bow and for a price I can afford.  Lately, this has turned out to be 200 grain Ace heads.
Silence is golden.

caihlen

Thanks so much everyone!  Next up then is t weigh the field points, get a broadhead target and go to town shooting!  

Ferndale is right at the Northwest terminus of the Bob at the top of the Swan and Mission Mountain ranges.  About 30 miles south of Glacier Nat'l Park.  Closest town is Bigfork.

JParanee

I tune my arrows with a hundred grain insert and a 125 grain head

By tuning I bare shaft ANC cut till they fly
Morrison & Titan ILF & BF Extreme Limbs
Silvertip 1 Piece 57#-Silvertip 57#-Black Widow Ma II 61#&69#-Fedora 560 69#- 560 57#-560 60#-560 55#-Brakenbury Shadow 60#-Hoyt Buffalo 55#- Bob Lee 58#- fishing bows PSE's

reddogge

I, like Charlie, choose my broadhead first, weigh it and then start tuning my arrow for a field point with the same upfront weight as my broadhead. When the field points tune well I then will shoot the broadheads and usually find they will fly well also.
Traditional Bowhunters of Maryland
Heart of Maryland Bowhunters
NRA
Mayberry Archers

BWD

I tune my shafts to fly with a particular field point weight that gives me the overall arrow weight I want. Then I see how good broadheads of the same weight fly, and adjust as needed for good broadhead flight.
Just because your arrow flys well with a field point doesn't always mean it will fly well with a broadhead of equal weight, without a little tinkering.
"If I had tried a little harder and practiced a little more, by now I could have been average"...Me

Encino Man

Charlie is dead on. A shaft and fletching is nothing more than a delivery system for a payload; The broadhead.
Fox Archery "Red Fox"
53# @ 28" 64" longbow
Browning "Safari II"
44# @ 28" 60" Recurve

JamesKerr

I tune my shafts in with whatever broadhead weight I want to shoot.
James Kerr

Steve Clandinin

Its the whole fun of the game and everyone and every bow shoots differant,lots of testing at first .Once you get things set for your style and what works best for you it becomes quite easy to set up.I think I'm making it more complicated for ya than it really is.
With so many great products and weights of arrows,adapters and heads theres limitless possibilities and definately combinations that will fly right for your set-ups.
Quote from Howard Hill.( Whenever he taught someone to shoot) "Son make up your mind right now if you want to target shoot or hunt as theres a world of differance between the two"

SIL

I try to tune everything to a 125 grain (if possible) for the sheer reason of the vast variety of broadheads available.

Bjorn

The broadhead makes the arrow about an inch longer, which weakens the spine about 5#. I use a 190 gn FP to tune for 160 BH,
and they fly great.

Red Beastmaster

I refuse to tinker with what works. In over two decades I have never used anything other than 125gr field points and broadheads. It works.
There is no great fun, satisfaction, or joy derived from doing something that's easy.  Coach John Wooden

mark land

I choose the tip weight that I prefer depending on what particular head I want to shoot and what tip weight has proven to perform well on game in the past then tune the shaft length and spine to get the arrow properly spined for that tip weight.
Typically for me something in the 225gr range has worked out well (combination of head weight and insert weight).
They'll be no quitters till we bag us some critters!


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