3Rivers Archery




The Trad Gang Digital Market














Contribute to Trad Gang and Access the Classifieds!

Become a Trad Gang Sponsor!

Traditional Archery for Bowhunters




RIGHT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS

LEFT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS

TRAD GANG CLASSIFIEDS ACCESS


What do you think makes your bow accurate?

Started by Ulysseys, February 25, 2014, 05:31:00 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Ulysseys

I had a great tuning experience today with a short modern longbow...it perfectly bare shafted...found its sweet spot and made it whisper quiet and had zero hand shock...it would be an absolute dream from a climber this spring and fall.  With that being said it lacked a little in accuracy when compared to my 64" longbow.  At 20 yards I'd say its plenty accurate to hunt but I'd about cut it off there and my groups were a little more open than I'm used to.  I only draw 27" and the bow is rated for that length...it doesn't stack and I feel no finger pinch.  With those things aside, why would the longer bow be more accurate?  Or what do you think makes the bow you settled on accurate for you?
Type inspirational or witty quote here

DaveV

I think the key phrase is "more forgiving" not more accurate.

If you bolted each into a Hooter Shooter, most likely they'll shoot exactly the same every time.

The difference is in the shooter, not the bow.

Deflex, limb length, center shot, grip, all sorts of things can make one bow more forgiving than another. I would generalize that shorter limbed bows are inherently harder to shoot consistently for many reasons. The question then becomes, how much stability are you willing to sacrifice to shoot a short bow?
Rudderbows selfbow,1959 Herters recurve, Toelke Whip, and just added a Hoyt ProVantage warf conversion to the mix.

grouseshooter002

It isn't the bow it's the arrow and you. The bow doesn't do anymore than propel the arrow.

Grouse

Ulysseys

I'm using forgiveness and accuracy interchangeably here then...assume all bows are shot from a human and not machine...is there something beyond finger pinch and stacking that makes a shorter bow inherently less accurate to a human, if those things were removed from the cycle?  Or do some people find short bows equally or more accurate?
Type inspirational or witty quote here

Orion

The problem is you can't remove those things from the cycle/equation.  They exist because the bow is shorter. The stack makes the bow feel stiffer/rougher, the finger pinch makes it more difficult to get off the string cleanly.  Shorter limbs are also more susceptible to various types of torquing with both the bow hand and drawing hand, because the string angle is always more acute up/down or side to side vis-a-vis a longer bow. Certain design and construction features can lessen the effects, of course, like a forward grip handle, extreme deflex/reflex limbs and limb materials that provide cross sectional stability, etc.

drewsbow

Try to be the person your dog thinks you are :0)
TGMM Family of the Bow
N.Y. Bowhunters member
BigJim 3 pc buffalo 48@28
BigJim thunderchild 55@31
BigJim thunderchild 55@32 Jim's bow

JamesKerr

Stability in the limbs is what I think gives a bow the most accuracy. If your limbs aren't tillered perfectly and balanced to each other the bow will never be as accurate or stable as a bow that has those things.
James Kerr

kat

QuoteOriginally posted by drewsbow:
ME    :goldtooth:  
X2
Ken Thornhill

With some bows, if I throw a twang into the string on release, the limbs go out time, torque is put into the grip and it all carries through until the arrow leaves the string.  What makes my new bow forgiving and accurate for me is because James understood how I shoot and built a bow that functions perfectly with my normal shot, and if I mess up a bit the smooth long limbs and the reverse grip corrects things before the arrow leaves the string.

Plumber

MONEY,just keep throwing money at the problem,It will get better

kat

I really think that switching from one bow to another, and making comparisons is tough.
I have found that if you work with a single bow for a while; you will adjust to it's subtle differences.
Ken Thornhill

Tater

Compton Traditional Bowhunters Charter/Life Member
Big Thompson Bowhunters
United Bowhunters of Illinois
TGMM Family of the Bow

With bows that are a bit sensitive to release errors, the good ol cant pinch tab helps me a lot.

Bazooka Joe

Ricke custome TD recurve
Ricke custom RD longbow
Founding Member Badger Knife Club
Wis. Traditional Archers
Wis Bowhunters Assoc.

larry

I can only speak to what makes it inaccurate...that would be my bow arm   :(  just can't hold it rock solid like I used to   :(    :(

katman

Grip, very stable well timed limbs and a well tuned arrow. I also shoot longer bows better when shooting longer than my normal hunting distance.
shoot straight shoot often

bartcanoe

QuoteOriginally posted by drewsbow:
ME    :goldtooth:  
That's what makes my bow inaccurate  ;)
Dave

US Army Retired (1984-2013)
Job 42:1-6

LongStick64

Primitive Bowhunting.....the experience of a lifetime

59Alaskan

All my bows are infinitely more accurate than me.

The longer ones tend to be more understanding of my imperfections though.
TGMM Family of the Bow

"God has given us two hands, one to receive with and the other to give with." - Billy Graham

Fisher Cat

I'll second what James Kerr said.  Stable limbs are more forgiving than "light whippy" limbs (When everything else is equal, the added mass will tend to make them a bit slower too though).

I don't believe longer bows are more forgiving TO ME.  Lately I seem to shoot 56" recurves better than anything else (and I'm 6' tall with a 28" draw).  

Its interesting to note that (everything else being equal) longer limbs will tend to be more "whippy" than shorter ones. Shorter limbs of the same draw weight will also tend to shoot faster because they have less mass.

My quest for the "magic bow" has taught me that a good fitting grip is also important for consistency and practicing with just one bow is also very helpful.  It's just not as much fun.     ;)    - John


Contact Us | Trad Gang.com © | User Agreement
Copyright 2003 thru 2025 ~ Trad Gang.com ©