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Carbon shaft selection?

Started by Justin S., July 15, 2016, 05:45:00 PM

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Justin S.

Hey y'all. I'm new here and I just got my first recurve about two months ago. I want to order new shafts to hunt with. My bow is 38@28" and I'm drawing 30". My arrows are 31" long. I'm shooting 500 spine beman centershots now with 75 grain inserts and 125 grain points. Should I stay with 500's or go up to 400's?
Thanks
60" Bob Lee Smoke 43#@30"
66" Hoyt Satori 47# @30"
64" Stalker Coyote 44# @30"

Stay with .500's! There is almost no way possible, short of about 300-400gr up front to make a .400 work with a 44ish# draw weight.

Bisch

Doug_K

According to Stu's calculator, assuming a center shot recurve, and a beman center shot at those specs, a 31" 400 spine with a 150 tip instead of a 125 would be within a #. That said, you wont know till you try it in the real world. Personal form obviously being a factor.

Personally my 43#@28 Kodiak magnum shoots 29" 500 (Goldtip hunter) with about 175ish up front. Closest I got to compare.
BUT! Bisch has gotta know what he's talking about better than I!
60" W&W Black Wolf 55#
64" Bamabows Hunter 52#
60" Bamabows Expedition III 52#
70" Bamabows Hunter 55#
60" A.D.M Earth 63#

Idk if I know what I'm talking about or not, but for me with my 50# bow (29"DL), if I go to .400, I have to leave it at 32" and put 250gr up front. I would think that number would be quite a bit higher with 7# less draw weight??? But who knows with that extra inch of draw?

Bisch

Justin S.

Thanks guys. I stayed with the 500's.
60" Bob Lee Smoke 43#@30"
66" Hoyt Satori 47# @30"
64" Stalker Coyote 44# @30"

bigbuckmalik

I have a Bob Lee with the same specs and same draw length. I am shooting axis 700's with 125 up front now. They bareshaft a little weak. A 600 with 175-200 up front bareshaft good. My opinion is you are still gonna be stiff with a 500

Longtoke

i would also hazard to guess you would be closer to 600 than 400

Justin S.

I bare shafted them today. Tried 100,125,145, and 200 grain points. Local shop didn't have any 175's. I was getting nick right with all of them except the 200's. They are flying great. Seems like the should be weak with the 75 grain brass insert and a 200 grain point by the charts.
60" Bob Lee Smoke 43#@30"
66" Hoyt Satori 47# @30"
64" Stalker Coyote 44# @30"

dbd870

Not surprised, my 45-50# bows need 200 up front with a 500 arrow. Now mine are cut 30.5"
SWA Spyder

the rifleman

Not sure what the centershot of your bow is, but my Whip that is in the low 40s needs full length 600 s w 200 grs up front.  I have an older Whip w/o the HS limbs that is 43 ( I pull 40) that found those carbon 600s too stiff.  I am using 1716s in that bow.  How a bow is cut center wise has a great impact on the arrow.  Unless your bow is cut very deeply I'll bet you need 600s or even lighter spine.

BWallace10327

QuoteOriginally posted by Bisch:
Stay with .500's! There is almost no way possible, short of about 300-400gr up front to make a .400 work with a 44ish# draw weight.

Bisch
Sometimes there are exceptions.  My PMA draws 43#@29", I draw it 29" and a Gold Tip 30" Gold Tip traditional 400 (5575) bare shafts perfectly.  It doesn't hurt to experiment.  The 3 Rivers spine calculator has worked for me on many occasions.
***$ Brent Wallace $***
NRA Life Time Member

smokin joe

It sort of depends on the bow and your other arrow components. I have a 43# at 29" Centaur (a naturally fast bow) and one arrow formula that bare shafts perfectly out of it is this:

-- GT Velocity 400 shaft at 30"
-- glue-in-glue-on nock adapter
-- Bohning Classic 5/16 nock
-- 9" Onestringer wrap
-- 3 - 5" feathers
-- 125 grain glue-in-glue-on brass point adapter
-- carbon collar
-- 125 gr point
This makes a 525 grain arrow.

I can make a 500 spine arrow that works perfectly too by going down to 29.5" length in a 3-rivers shaft and using a 75 gr point adaptor -- with everything else the same. This makes a 490 grain arrow.

The weight of the components will have a heck of a lot of bearing on how the arrow shaft behaves.
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