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


Main Menu

? For wood arrow shooters....

Started by TX FLY CASTER, September 06, 2015, 12:48:00 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

TX FLY CASTER

I recently built a new R/D longbow for myself , #50 @ 28" ,I draw right at 27.5" so the bow pulls around #48 for me. I bare shafted some 45/50's cut @ 29" today and with 160's they fly like darts. This puts me right over 10gpp. My question is..... most spine charts show 55/60's for the 160's , just curious if other shooters get similar results ? should the 45/50's be weak?

Mryan2176

I don't shoot wood, but spine varies from shooter to shooter based on form. If it works it works. 3 guys with the same bow and draw length could very well all shoot different arrows.

TX FLY CASTER


Looper

It seems that you have found the right spine/point weight combo for you and that bow. A spine chart is simply going to give you a reasonably close starting point. 10 gpp is just about perfect, too.

Nice looking bow.

Steve Clandinin

Like the rest said,if they shoot great go to it.With wood many combos will work,just have to shoot them.
Quote from Howard Hill.( Whenever he taught someone to shoot) "Son make up your mind right now if you want to target shoot or hunt as theres a world of differance between the two"

Tejasmick

What material are the shafts?  Keep in mind that most charts were developed based on cedar shafts.  Going to a different species of wood, even with the same deflection, can have different dynamic spine.

It has been said above.  If it works... don't break it.  Nice job on the bow.

trad_bowhunter1965

Great advice from all but remember this your string will play a part in how your arrow spine. the tighter the nock fits on the string the weaker the arrow spine.
" I am driven by those thing that rouse my traditional sense of archery and Bowhunting" G Fred Asbell

West Coast Traditional Bowhunters.
Trad Gang Hall of Fame
Yellowstone Longbows
Compton Traditional Bowhunters
Professional Bowhunters Society Associate Member
Retired 38 years DoD civilian.

Biathlonman

I'm betting they would still look good with 145 or even 125 grain heads.  But if ain't broke don't fix it.

Fletcher

Each bow/shooter combo is a little different and depth of shelf cut makes a huge difference in spine needs.  If you are cut a little out from center, this doesn't sound off to me.  If you want to check flight a little more precise, paper tuning works great for me.  Actual arrow flight is what really counts, not what the charts say.
Good judgement comes from experience.  Experience comes from bad judgement.

"The next best thing to playing and winning is playing and losing."

"An archer doesn't have to be a bowhunter, but a bowhunter should be an archer."

TX FLY CASTER

Well .... This bow is cut to center, I also shot some 2018's with 200grains up front. The bareshaft hits stiff but with a 160 snuffer and glued on a 40gr adapter they fly to center? I went back and shot the 45/50 cedars with 160's and now they show stiff. Must be form related.....LOL.

TX FLY CASTER

I would really like to tune this rig out for 10gpp. The area that I am hunting will demand farther shots so I want to keep the trajectory fairly flat.The 2018's fly well but at 12.5 gpp they drop quick.

9 Shocks

If you were to stick with aluminum's I'd look into getting 1916's.
60" Bivouac Backland ILF longbow 42@27
58" Schafer Silvertip recurve 47@27
58" Primaltech Longbow 45@27

Veneficus

For my 52 pound bear takedown the charts say I need a 50-55 28 inch arrow with 125 grain point. After bareshaft tuning I acually use a 65-70 with a 125 grain point.
Spine charts cant take into account form,different rests,strings,silencers and nock fit ect. They are never correct for me at least,like others said they are just a general starting point.

Bud B.

Thinking backwards    :rolleyes:  

Go to 190s and cut from there if then too light in spine.
TGMM Family of the Bow >>>>---------->

"You can learn more about deer hunting with a bow and arrow in a week, than a gun hunter might learn all his life." ----- Fred Bear

Chris Pharr

Hey all, greetings from Kansas. I am also looking at getting some woodies like the OP. I'm shooting a new Bear Grizzly, 55lb, drawing 29", so really about 57.5lb ish. Would like to shoot some 190 gr Grizzlies from 3 rivers, they're calculator says I need 80-85lb shafts (POC) at 30" BOP to nock valley. Does that sound about right to anyone? Rather be a touch weak and cut down the shaft if necessary. Thanks in advance
60% of the time,  it works every time

Bud B.

Hey Chris, and welcome!

That sounds like the area you need to be.

BUT


The best thing going for folks wanting to shoot woods is to have a test kit of arrows made up, in your case, those 30" BOPs are great and then use the weight head you want, and have a range to test out 75-80, 80-85, 85-90 (I'd get Surewood Doug Fir shafts), two (or three) arrows in each range.

Some of our great arrowsmith sponsors would be willing to help you out, I'm sure.
TGMM Family of the Bow >>>>---------->

"You can learn more about deer hunting with a bow and arrow in a week, than a gun hunter might learn all his life." ----- Fred Bear

Chris Pharr

Is there any particular reason for Doug fir over cedar? Trying for a higher foc trad arrow for my new bow. Thanks for the thoughts..
60% of the time,  it works every time

fujimo

i personally like to use spruce- light and strong- then i can put a heavier head on- to get the GPP up and get the really good FOC.
spruce is really tough too!

Bud B.

QuoteOriginally posted by Chris Pharr:
Is there any particular reason for Doug fir over cedar? Trying for a higher foc trad arrow for my new bow. Thanks for the thoughts..
Of all the shafts I've used, Surewood's is by far the best. I have not used every vendor's product, but of those I have, Surewood is very consistent and the straightest, and the most weight consistent as well. I don't worry about FOC or extreme FOC. I just want well tuned arrows that fly true.

I have been wanting to try Wapiti shafts. I have not bought any from Rose City, either. Yet.
TGMM Family of the Bow >>>>---------->

"You can learn more about deer hunting with a bow and arrow in a week, than a gun hunter might learn all his life." ----- Fred Bear

frank bullitt

Yeah alot of great suggestions, like bud b. say s get some varied shafts to try. Be sure to stay with one  flavor of wood, pine, fir etc.

Every shooter is different, we are "custom made"! Charts are for foundations, like buying jeans at Walmart, close but not custom fit!


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