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Minimal amout of arrow weight

Started by Sticks2117, December 15, 2010, 08:56:00 AM

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Sticks2117

Say my bow pulls 53# at my draw weight. How much should that arrow weigh and what is the least amount of arrow weight I can use?     :confused:
Big Jims Thunderchild 53# @ 26"
Zbow Z58 TD hunter 55# @ 27" (RIP)
Ferguson Patriot by Bear 55#@28
Ferguson Redhawk 66" 60# @ 28
GN Critter Gitter 60#@28
LM North American Hunting Club
Wisconsin Bowhunters Member
NRA Member

Bird Dog

I wouldn't go below 9 grains per pound---so an arrow weight of at least 477 grs.

PEARL DRUMS

MOST bowyers will tell you 9-12 gpp or more. My bows are all over the board, I shoot what feels and sounds good to me in each bow. If I had your bow, I would try to get my arrows at 500-550 to start with, then listen to the bow from there. They will let you know if they want more or less weight.

smokin joe

The old rule of thumb was 8 to 12 GPP. With that the lightest arrow you could get away with would be 424 gr.

Don't go below 8 grains per pound or bow damage could result. And going above 12 grains per pound gets you past the point of being useful.

Fred Bear kept things at about 9 gpp, and I am not one to argue with Fred's success or knowledge. I am shooting 8.7 gpp right now -- that is as close to Fred's specs as I could get with the latest dozen I made up.

Stu Miller's Dynamic Spine Calculator will help you predict the weight of a finished arrow with just about any component choices. You can find the calculator on line wit Google.

Shoot straight.
Joe
TGMM
Compton
PBS
Trad Gang Hall of Fame

Fischman

I try to stay  above 9-10 gpp, your bow will tell you if your too light because it will be loud and probably have handshock.
YOU HAVE TO STAND FOR SOMETHING OR YOU'LL FALL FOR ANYTHING !!!

TDHunter

A great rule it your going to hunt: start at 500grn no matter what your weight and go up if your bow can handle it.

Andy Cooper

If you're hunting with it, I'd lean heavy, 10+ gpp of bow draw weight. If not, then use whatever shoots best.
:campfire:       TGMM Family of the Bow       :archer:      

My Father's bow rack is the sky.

Sticks2117

Big Jims Thunderchild 53# @ 26"
Zbow Z58 TD hunter 55# @ 27" (RIP)
Ferguson Patriot by Bear 55#@28
Ferguson Redhawk 66" 60# @ 28
GN Critter Gitter 60#@28
LM North American Hunting Club
Wisconsin Bowhunters Member
NRA Member

Bowwild

My arrows are 9.02 GPS.  I'm going to bump that to 10 or a bit higher before next season.  I'm not bumping because of less than stellar results (two complete pass throughs -- no tracking jobs this year).  I'm curious what the heavier arrow will do to the feel and sound of my bows, especially my Blacktail.

Burnsie

I like a heavier arrow simply for the sound deadening.  A heavy arrow can really quiet down a bow.
"You can't get into a bar fight if you don't go to the bar" (Grandma was pretty wise)

Carbon Jack

I've been bow hunting for 40 years. Up until about 15 years ago I went along with convention and shot heavy wooden arrows for hunting. Never liked aluminum because I found them noisy. All my wooden arrows weighed over 500 grains with broadheads attached. This was pretty typical of everyone back then and it worked fine.

Then I discovered carbon shafts. I've not used a hunting arrow over 420 grains in 15 years. For the last 7-8 years my arrows have been of the same 383 grains. (Beman 500 cut to 28.5", 125gr broadhead) This made possible by the newer Beman shafts.

I shoot about 55 pounds and get the flattest arrow trajectory I've ever gotten. Hitting deer has become more positive. Penetration is completed. I shoot all the way through my animals. I never had such penetration when using wooden arrows of heavier weight. Plus I now use less bow weight as I've gotten older. I used to hunt with 75 pounds. Now 55-60 pounds.

Only Gene Wensel will admit in print to using this setup. I happened to read an article he wrote a few years after stumbling upon this light/fast carbon choice myself. Having seen with my own eyes how effective it is, I'll never go back to heavy arrows again.

I shoot about 7 grains per pound. No bow I own has suffered any ill affect. I've been doing this for 15 years now and shoot about 7-800 arrows per week year round. Modern bows are very tough.

Jack

Robert Honaker

I've taken all my deer with 450-470gr arrows using three and fourblade heads out of a 53lb bow.

chanumpa

Robert is right ,and fine at that weight.I wouldnt want to see any lighter and would like to see 550 total weight as a good sound bench mark ,espaecially for elk ,bear ,etc.500gr.+ is what I would like to see,and your 53# willpush it fine.

AdamH

PEARL DRUMS ,, Nailed it !! Let the Bow tell you .... Me, I'll stay on the Heavy Side ...


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