The original comment was he can get arrows to hit target knock high if he is knock high, that is a bow that isn't tuned. If you need to be knock high (some mathews have this) then that is what's necessary to tune the bow and get perfect arrow flight.
Please explain why you would want you knock point t high or low causing knock high or low inpact?? Do we not put bows in vices and attach levels to them to ensure everything lines up for perfect arrow flight? Why would we want a high or low knock point??
Go shoot a target at 20yrs with your 600g bare shaft with your target set at eye height. Then post pictures of your arrows with a level on them. Do the same with a 450g arrow and then we can debate
Not sure why but I've never had a bow clock left...I stand 1 arrow length away from my target to test because it only moves a slight amount in the length. I've seen people on yt do this it 5yrd and then decide there arrow goes ccw. Once it makes a full rotation you don't know what way its spinning.
If you watch some trad bow guy shoot heavy (600+g) setups you will see the tip down, the low velocity has a harder time fighting the effects of gravity and pull the front down, there larger fletching at the rear of the arrow grabs air and forces the rear of the arrow down. It's all a balancing...
Tbh I never shot them...primer pickets are tight so I loaded them all up with cheap components to go fire them. I'm focusing on archery this year but I do plan on loading for my kids and wife so I will be sure to post results. In all fairness though the factory 150eldx ammo is pretty frigin hard...
Driving factor imo has been technology and bullets that are designed to perform at there gives velocity.
We shoot 7-08 at everything in Alaska with the 150g eldx, hornady specifically designed that bullet for sub 3kfps non magnum rifles (280, 280ai, 7-08, 7saum) it will out perform a standard...
You can literally shoot these through sheet metal and not damage a blade, they will stick into bricks, blow though shoulders, and at the end of the year you swap in new blades. Inserts solve weight issues also.
I think most people know the answer to this is the exodus hands down but it's been around so long folks are bored with it. You literally can't find a test where that head doesn't place in the top 3.
We dont gut our kills so we only recover bullets that end up in the meat or under the opposite side hide. These stopped inside the moose but they only went 30ish yrds.
I see that as a minus personally but that's just my opinion. I hunt whitetail also and use a Carter wise choice that can lock on but if you bump it when your grabbing your bow it's gone! U just keep it in my pocket with a warmer and I honestly play with it to pass time. Ok that sounded wrong
What I'm saying is there entire point of making the release doesn't make sense. They say 90% of us shoot hinge style release wrong. Not my words there's