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10 gpp recommendation, rules of thumb

Started by FrankM, April 29, 2010, 11:25:00 AM

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When someone has shot a dozen deer and and had complete penetration on three elk and pass throughs on two with a 52 pound @ 26" Schluz Legend using cedar arrows with 125 grain broadheads, a good rule of thumb is, don't tell him he has got it all wrong. Another one is don't offer him $200 for that 18 year old bow. I am not the one that told him he had it wrong, I am the one that offered $200 for the bow, either way I am lucky I did not lose any teeth.

SteveB

QuoteJust looking for little words of wisdom that all bowhunters believe.  
It's a very short list that  ALL believe.

Here it is:

1.
2.


James Wrenn

No matter what you do or how well you do it with what you use someone else will think there way is better.

That is the only truth I know about bowhunters.   :D
....Quality deer management means shooting them before they get tough....

Flying Dutchman

As a rule of thumb I would not go under the 8 grains/lbs. Personally I think 8 grains will still be very light, possible shortening the life of your bow.
I would say somewhere between 9 and 10 grains/lbs would be a good compromis between speed and penetration.
I mostly aim at 9,5 grains/lbs. The outcome however is determined by bareshafting. During this proces you decide which point weights and shaftlenght gives you that perfect flight.
For my current setup I ended up with 9.4 grains/lbs and a FOC of 19%. My arrows fly with a speed of aprr. 190 fps.
It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that string! [/i]                            :rolleyes:              
Cari-bow Peregrine
Whippenstick Phoenix
Timberghost ordered
SBD strings on all, what else?

Terry Green

Heavy doesn't always penetrate better....I found that lighter carbons out penetrate 100 grain heavier wood arrows years ago.

As stated earlier...too many variables to make a blanket statement.
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"It's important,  when going after a goal, to never lose sight of the integrity of the journey" - Andy Garcia

'An anchor point is not a destination, its  an evolution to conclusion'

Bowferd

I agree with Terry, but I have a terrible left shoulder and find that the heavier arrow allows me more shots while target shooting or stumping.
If I stick with 12gpp there seems to be an incredible difference.
The carbons that I still use from time to time are lighter than the woods and cane, but my shoulder takes a beating.
We just have to find what works best for us and run with it.
Been There, Done That, Still Plowin.
Cane and Magnolia tend to make good arrow.
Hike naked in the backwoods.

AdamH

Do yourself & your Bow a favor and stay with the Heavier Arrow, your Bow will thank you for it ...

Terry Green

Best clarify....

I shoot 580 grain carbon arrows out of my 60-65# bows...and I don't consider that to be a 'light arrow'.......but they do penetrate better than the 680 grain compressed maples that I have.

So again, heavier doesn't always penetrate better.....that does not mean I was saying to shoot a 'light arrow'.
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"It's important,  when going after a goal, to never lose sight of the integrity of the journey" - Andy Garcia

'An anchor point is not a destination, its  an evolution to conclusion'


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