nubraskan
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2023
- Messages
- 152
I heard some claims that some people are able to be successful at broadhead tuning at longer distances, so I decided to give it a shot. Generally I would get my bow paper tuned, then bareshaft tuned at 20, then dialed the broadhead at 30 (which generally didn't take much if any rest adjustment after the bareshaft).
This time I did the usual bareshaft to 20, then went immediately to broadhead tuning at 70 yards (Micro hades 100gr). They were hitting ~8" low right off the bat and it took a lot of vertical rest adjustment to have them hitting with the field points. Out of morbid curiosity, I launched a bareshaft at 70 yards and it sailed over the target absurdly high. For some more testing, I backed up to 100 and the broadheads are hitting quite a bit low still, about 7-9" on average.
Now the question is, is it futile trying to get my fixed broadheads tuned at 70+ yards, or am I missing something? My assumption now is that the added drag of the broadhead (especially a vented broadhead) is slowing it down enough that at extended ranges they will probably always group low.
This time I did the usual bareshaft to 20, then went immediately to broadhead tuning at 70 yards (Micro hades 100gr). They were hitting ~8" low right off the bat and it took a lot of vertical rest adjustment to have them hitting with the field points. Out of morbid curiosity, I launched a bareshaft at 70 yards and it sailed over the target absurdly high. For some more testing, I backed up to 100 and the broadheads are hitting quite a bit low still, about 7-9" on average.
Now the question is, is it futile trying to get my fixed broadheads tuned at 70+ yards, or am I missing something? My assumption now is that the added drag of the broadhead (especially a vented broadhead) is slowing it down enough that at extended ranges they will probably always group low.