First off - I never called you "unethical" or "acceptable". So go ahead and take of those "quotes" off something you made up. I said many, many, many times now - Shoot what you like. I made no ethical judgements - I just presented math showing the downsides. Real tangible downsides and people should be honest about them and not preach about how great their setup is without accurately weighing the downsides. It's not controversial at all for me to say someone should shoot a normal weight arrow for their setup with a sharp fixed blade and have perfect arrow flight. The burden of proof lies on the feet of the person making the controversial statement that the appropriate arrow weight for a compound should be 665 grains. This is very far off the bell curve of setups.
As far as
@Beendare setup goes - I don't think he's unethical at all, nor do I think you are. His setup clearly seems to be working. He's also very transparent about any downsides and is honest about the tradeoffs of a heavier arrow.
That is all I'm getting at.
It has always been a sound, distance and reaction time debate. This has been every nearly post I've made. I've said at least 3 time now but will repeat myself again - a heavy arrow penetrates better, will allow for more forgiveness in broadhead flight (given broadhead surface area is equal), but it gets there slower, gives the animal more time to react and if you have a range estimation error then you will hit your target further away from the intended location.
I haven't heard anyone say this. He's the problem - Your logic is circular.
@Beendare trad setup is passing through nearly everything with less energy/momentum including a large moose. Ashby at 650 grains demonstrated that he's lethal. Given that information we can gather something very important - that level of momentum and energy is sufficient to kill reliably. Why does one "need" to increase momentum past what has been demonstrated over and over again to be lethal? What is it that you're tangibly gaining? This is the weighting I keep talking about. What is it that you're gaining by shooting so much more momentum and KE than Ashby?
It just seems like standard simple cave man thought process. More bigger = more gooder. More gooder = me better. It's just to opposite end of the spectrum of the guys shooting super light arrows with massive mechanicals. More faster = more better. More bigger = more better. Ugg ugg.
While imperfect and I learn more everyday, I'm progressing down a path as follows to increase my lethality:
- Baseline: I have more KE & M than Ashby ever did.
- We know for a fact that a faster arrow has a flatter trajectory and has less range error.
- We know for a fact that all things equal (noise, distance) the animal can move more if it takes less time for the animal to get there.
- We know for a factthat as velocity increases broadhead (given equal surface area) flight goes down. The path forks here: You've got reduce to surface area or decrease velocity. This means that in order to shoot super fast like 300 fps+ you've got to go mechanical, reduce velocity to below 300 fps to shoot a smaller or vented fixed, or reduce velocity a lot to shoot a large fixed.
- Given that I still want good penetration on an elk and most likely put two holes in it - that rules out the mechanical leaves two paths for elk.
- The data on 3:1 is questionable - Even in the updated Ashby testing a .8:1 fixed head still penetrated better than some other "more mechanically advantaged heads".
- Knowing that I have energy and M over Ashby - I can reduce my length to get flight. This lands me between 280-295 fps with a excellent flying fixed blade.
- We know for a fact that all things equal (sharpness, materials, etc) that reducing the cutting area of the broadhead increase penetration. Another fork - how much penetration do we need?
- We also know that based on the data provided in the Barnette arrow flight report (provided to Ashby) that a 3 blade has better flight characteristics than a 2 blade.
- Given that a 3 blade is easy to sharpen, better balanced and has better flight characteristics - arrow flight is number one. 3 blade it is.
Is this thought process perfect? No. But at the end of this logical path - what do we see? It's nearly
EXACTLY what nearly everything on the compound market is selling, if you walk into a bow shop this is what you'll see, and is what 90% of all hunters are using. Moderate weights and 3 blade decent cut size vented fixed blades to reduce area. Again, it's not a conspiracy. While there is madness in crowds - there is also wisdom.
Again, shoot what you like - but let's be honest about the tradeoffs. I have no problem with the guy who says I like to shoot heavy arrows because I like them and it give me confidence. So long as they know that it has tradeoffs. Same as a guy shooting a 350 grain with a rage on it. I'm not going to tell that guy he shouldn't hunt or he is unethical. But his scenarios of things going wrong are a different profile.