Okay, I'm sure there are obviously lots of variable, and opinions out there. But I'm trying to decide what would be considered "too light" of an arrow setup for elk this fall. Im currently shooting 72 lbs and I believe my arrow weight is around 350-60 grains. What are your thoughts?
Itās light, but certainly wonāt bounce offā¦ I think youāre way better off getting over 400gr for multiple reasons. Iām shooting 73#@28.5ā and imo, the perfect versatile elk hunting arrows are that 450-550gr, Iām currently shooting a 562gr arrow that has absolutely no downside for what I do.
You are right, there are a ton of variables, and though your arrow is light, I know I used to kill elk drama free with a 380gr arrow before I knew any differentā¦ the elk also didnāt know any different
My biggest practical reason for staying over 500gr is to keep arrow speed down enough that my setup is extremely forgiving with fixed heads, your form will not always be perfect in the woods, things are not the same in your back yard vs high stress standing on uneven ground with a bull in front of you that you really want to kill, itās a very different thing, so I want a setup that caters to that reality, and a quiet bow is a good side benefit, even though most bulls will stand there and watch the arrow hit them, thatās not always the case.
We should all build arrows that make practical sense depending on the hunting we do, it will never be a one size fits all.
I may get a different bow next year more catered to tree stand deer hunting (60-65# limbs) in which case I will drop arrow weight to maintain my current arrow castā¦ I think a lighter draw bow makes sense for sitting in a stand in the cold, muscles not warm, sitting, and drawing in slow motionā¦ I will also use it for everything else, so a 475gr arrow will probably be what I shoot for
Your light arrow will still be hell on elk if you are shooting through ribs, and if you hit heavy bone, it will decrease your chances of getting through, but a heavy arrow doesnāt mean you will get through, just gives you a better chance, regardless of the Ashby propaganda, a ton of his information is great, but him and his crew have went off the rails buying into their own BS, giving good advice with plenty of bad advice mixed inā¦ the other extreme (light/fast crowd) are equally as guilty of giving bad informationā¦ they too have some valid points, but their ego will not allow them to tell the whole truthā¦
Pin down what types of shots you expect to encounter and put some thought into your setup to cater it to exactly what you want to do, avoid the extremes, ignore the BS and build your perfect middle ground arrow, you can lean towards either extreme, but try to stay closer to the middle than the edgesā¦ thatās my best generic advice without knowing more about the hunting you doā¦ if your setup is dialed and tuned right now, use what you have and build a more thought out arrow in the off season for next year