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Tuning Broadheads...

Started by gobblegrunter, January 05, 2011, 05:19:00 PM

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gobblegrunter

Stupid question coming from stupid newbie    :D   :

What exact tuning is involved for broadheads aside from regular/standard tuning for field points? Raising/lowering nock point?

Also, I saw an opinion on another thread that woodsmans are the easiest to tune...is this opinion shared by the majority? If not, what other broadheads are beginner-friendly? What qualities of a broadhead makes it "easy to tune"?

I know, I know...I'm throwin' a lot at ya...but thanks for the help in advance!
"It's not about inches or antlers..."     ~Bill Langer

widow sax

The method I like to use to tune my bows is papertune it is a very accurate meathod for me. I only have ever had to tune with field tips and then shoot my broadheads and they fly great. I shoot Woodsman Elite. Magnus stinger 2 and 4 blade and the regular Magnus. If I was pressed I would say for me the woodsman and the stinger 2 blade fly the best and the stinger 4 blade is very close I do not shoot the regular Magnus any longer but they flew good. Some broadheads are more critical of your form,release and fletching size. I would tune your bow with field tips and go shoot your broadheads you may not have any worries. All the broadheads I listed are good but I prefer the woodsman Elites right now but you do have to sharpen them and you can get away with not sharpening Stingers.   Widow

Rob DiStefano

i haven't killed no where close as some folks and i am not a broadhead expert, but i do know what tunes up easiest for me - heads that are as close to 3:1 ratio as possible.
IAM ~ The only government I trust is my .45-70 & my Ol' Brown Bess

gobblegrunter

Widow, thanks for the feedback! I've got my field-point arrows tuned in pretty well, and the 2 broadheads I was thinking I'd try (whenever I'm comfortable enough to hunt with my trad gear) were the stinger 2 blades and the woodsmans, so maybe I'll be ok...we'll see. BTW, my parents live right around the corner from you in the large metropolis of Roxbury, while my sister lives around the other corner in Carlisle!     :)    

Rob, thanks for the input on this thread. Your post on the other thread really got me to ponderin' but I didn't wanna hijack it. Thinkin that I'll try the woodsmans first.
"It's not about inches or antlers..."     ~Bill Langer

gobblegrunter

ttt for any other feedback...
"It's not about inches or antlers..."     ~Bill Langer

Stumpkiller

QuoteOriginally posted by gobblegrunter:
Stupid question coming from stupid newbie     :D    :

What exact tuning is involved for broadheads aside from regular/standard tuning for field points? Raising/lowering nock point?

Methods are the same, but the flight testing is done with broadheads on the arrows instead of field points.  If they don't fly the same and to the same point you're not done tuning.    ;)
Charlie P. }}===]> A.B.C.C.

Bear Kodiak & K. Hunter, D. Palmer Hunter, Ben Pearson Hunter, Wing Presentation II & 4 Red Wing Hunters (LH & 3 RH), Browning Explorer, Cobra II & Wasp, Martin/Howatt Dream Catcher, Root Warrior, Shakespeare Necedah.

Jason R. Wesbrock

I bareshaft tune with field points. Once I get that done, I've never had a problem getting broadheads the same weight to impact the same as my practice arrows. Wide, narrow, vented or solid, they all impact the same.

widow sax

Its a small world Gobblegrunter were are you located.

gobblegrunter

QuoteOriginally posted by widow sax:
Its a small world Gobblegrunter were are you located.
I'm in Quarryville, just south of Lancaster...small world, indeed!
"It's not about inches or antlers..."     ~Bill Langer

gobblegrunter

Stumpkiller and Jason,
Good info. As I'm sure you've figured by now, I havent even bought broadheads yet, much less shot them. I'll look forward to picking some up soon and tryin' them out. Being that I'm already pretty well tuned, it might not be a huge undertaking from what I'm gathering from the responses here. Thanks everyone!
"It's not about inches or antlers..."     ~Bill Langer

Benjy

The bigger the broadhead, the more surface area it has to catch the air and wind plane making it "more" sensitive to shoot consistently.
TGMM Family of the Bow
ZIPPER NITRO 64" LONGBOW 50#@29"
ZIPPER SXT   60" RECURVE 52#@29"
ZIPPER SXT   64" LONGBOW 71#@29"

gobblegrunter

QuoteOriginally posted by Benjy:
The bigger the broadhead, the more surface area it has to catch the air and wind plane making it "more" sensitive to shoot consistently.
Makes good sense. It actually goes along with Rob's 3:1 ratio on the woodsman broadheads.    :thumbsup:
"It's not about inches or antlers..."     ~Bill Langer

Benjy

It won't be long and you will be an "expert"!!!

Enjoy the ride!
Benjy
TGMM Family of the Bow
ZIPPER NITRO 64" LONGBOW 50#@29"
ZIPPER SXT   60" RECURVE 52#@29"
ZIPPER SXT   64" LONGBOW 71#@29"


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