doc holiday13
WKR
I've seen a lot of "this is how you tune for broadheads"
But it seems like there has been a method arising that seems like it would be the fastest most efficient way to determine A) is your arrow properly spined B) is your bow properly tuned
Dudley's HIL method was very intriguing and Nick Fisher (AAE) both seem to have a great way to determine your bow tuning
I'm thinking there might be some sort of hybrid of the 2 methods that can eliminate a good bit of time
Nick Fisher basically carries an bareshaft arrow that has tape added to the nock end to simulate teh weight of fletchings without the aerodynamic influence. Shoot the arrow with a fieldpoint and shoot it with a broadhead to see what your point of impact looks like. This method seems to be the one to use to check if your bow needs tuning. It almost seems that this could be your go to method right away. My speculation would also be that you would just attempt to nock tune your arrows(with broadheads) this way and if they aren't grouping you'd need to get your bow checked
The HIL method requires several spines of fletched arrows to figure out which one your bow prefers, but to my knowledge this test does not use broadheads. But it might be worth trying this with broadheads. This would be mostly a starting point when you first get your bow
Thoughts? Discussions?
But it seems like there has been a method arising that seems like it would be the fastest most efficient way to determine A) is your arrow properly spined B) is your bow properly tuned
Dudley's HIL method was very intriguing and Nick Fisher (AAE) both seem to have a great way to determine your bow tuning
I'm thinking there might be some sort of hybrid of the 2 methods that can eliminate a good bit of time
Nick Fisher basically carries an bareshaft arrow that has tape added to the nock end to simulate teh weight of fletchings without the aerodynamic influence. Shoot the arrow with a fieldpoint and shoot it with a broadhead to see what your point of impact looks like. This method seems to be the one to use to check if your bow needs tuning. It almost seems that this could be your go to method right away. My speculation would also be that you would just attempt to nock tune your arrows(with broadheads) this way and if they aren't grouping you'd need to get your bow checked
The HIL method requires several spines of fletched arrows to figure out which one your bow prefers, but to my knowledge this test does not use broadheads. But it might be worth trying this with broadheads. This would be mostly a starting point when you first get your bow
Thoughts? Discussions?