PA_Hunter8
Lil-Rokslider
What is your idea for an idea arrow weight for both elk and deer hunting? Something middle of the road as far as weight and speed?
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Hey guys, I’m curious what bow setup (Draw Length & Weight) everyone is shooting and what arrow setup they use along with that.
What is the “ideal” setup in your mind?
I made a video on this topic (shared below) and I’m curious to hear everyone’s thoughts on their ideal setup!
If I use a compound, I shoot 65 lbs with a 29 inch draw. My total projectile weight is 700 grains with a 250 grain,single bevel broadhead for 22.5% FOC.
Once you get over 500 grains you see real improvement in penetration. Once you get over 19% FOC you can steer any broadhead on the market. I like feathers because they are light on the back end of the arrow. Plastic is too heavy (I think the ones you use in your video are about 10 grains each) The feathers I use are 2 grains each.
I dont give a ratz rear about speed or arrow arch during flight. So long as the arrow gets there by the end of the season, I'm ok since I care about what happens once the arrow gets there (penetration). Never was one to fall for the whole speed fad that so many fell for.
I want my arrow to travel between 265 and 280 FPS. Anything slower and it is hard to get 100 yards out of my rig. Any faster and my tuning expertise reaches its end. With my current setup I’m at a 470 grain arrow. I like to load up for FOC, so I buy a lighter GPI shaft and load up the front. Right now I shoot black eagle carnivores with 92 grains worth of insert weight and a 100 grain head.
I only hunt whitetail and pigs, so I may change once it is time to shoot elk.
After more than 41 years of bowhunting Ive seen every fad out there. Ive tried them all. Ive tried all the philosophies and am always experimenting and testing and weeding out the crap from the sound concepts. Since the dawn of time, it's been a self evident truth that heavy arrows go deeper and as a result cause more damage and result in an exit hole. With that comes a quieter bow and better arrow steerage. I always plan for the worst case and build arrow packages with the expectations that the worst will happen, like hitting heavy bone or hard quartering angles will be encountered and I do what is necessary to counter the worst case and build with that in mind. When the stars align and everything goes well, I'm left digging my arrow out of a tree or out of the earth but I plan for the worst.
This Russian bore hunt is an example. I planned for a quartering away shot and things didn’t work out as planned but thanks to a heavy arrow, I was picking my arrow up out of the snow after blowing through the off side shoulder. Heavy arrows helped my take a 1,000 bull in Hawaii and will hopefully be to my advantage on water buffalo in 10 days.
[video=youtube;5O1xjZDeFfQ]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5O1xjZDeFfQ&list=UUrDKSMxGGaa59V0uZPABJ6Q&index=11]Ron's January 2018 archery hog movie - YouTube[/video]
I would disagree with the OP's "Ideal"
I think most guys are best served with an arrow thats a minimum of 450gr. IME from seeing hundreds of animals die to an arrow; Arrow performance matters!
Its funny....you never hear an educated rifle hunter say, "Bullet performance doesn't matter"...why is it many bowhunters only care about trajectory and not their arrows performance?
That said, each bowhunter needs to decide which criteria to emphasize to come up with their own "Ideal"
So take me as an example; I've learned over the years that the tradeoff of speed for a louder bow isn't worth it. Flat trajectory comes at a cost...and the cost isn't worth the sacrifices. If its a long shot where a couple yards in range makes a difference; those scenarios in the field I always have time to use rangefinder....and on the close shots trajectory is a non factor.
Thus I will take the heavier arrow all day long for the many advantages...with the only disadvantage being a little bit of trajectory loss at long range....a non factor in the way I hunt. YMMV
As you mature and go through the years and encounter all sorts of hunting scenarios, you will arrive at realizations that an old guy cant convince you of on a chat room. You will have to come to them on your own. Give it time. I base my comments on first hand experience with a couple hundred deer and many bear and some pigs and Feral cattle and buffalo and soon, water buffalo. We arrive at our conclusions based on first hand experiences.
450-470 is what most whitetail hunters would consider an insanely heavy arrow.
Faster and trajectory on whitetails isn’t even an argument man. You need to look at he trajectory differences between 450g and 650g at normal hunting distances. The differences are so small that you really aren’t gaining any trajectory advantages between the two but with a heavier arrow you gain a lot better penetration and quietness with a heavy arrow which in my mind is anything above 600g. 450 is a light arrow not middle of the road.Very true! Like I said in the video, that is (in my mind) an ideal “middle of the road” arrow weight for people who want a faster arrow for whitetail that is also capable of harvesting elk. 450-470 is what most whitetail hunters would consider an insanely heavy arrow. Elk hunters may not see that as heavy at all, it’s all based on the situation.
By no means did I mean that this is ideal for every situation, (perhaps I could have clarified that a bit more) but I hunt 99% whitetail and 1% elk, so shooting a super heavy arrow doesn’t exactly fit my needs like it would for a western hunter who needs penetration above all. There’s certainly no perfect arrow, each person has to decide what is most important for them and their hunting needs. Thanks for the comment! I love hearing feedback.
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WHAT??
No. No, its not. out of a 70 Lb bow that a light weight 6.5 grains per pound.
5 to 6 grains per pound is light weight
7 and 8 is mid weight
9 and up is a heavy weight.
Im at about 11 grains per pound.
Faster and trajectory on whitetails isn’t even an argument man. You need to look at he trajectory differences between 450g and 650g at normal hunting distances. The differences are so small that you really aren’t gaining any trajectory advantages between the two but with a heavier arrow you gain a lot better penetration and quietness with a heavy arrow which in my mind is anything above 600g. 450 is a light arrow not middle of the road.
500 grains is a good arrow weight
I get the impression you just enjoy disagreeing with me,
but what I’m trying to explain is that where I live, and what I hunt, I do not know many people at all that shoot over an 8.4 grains per inch arrow. I’m sure they exist, but I haven’t met many of them here in the east. Unfortunately, for whitetail guys, heavy arrows are not emphasized the way they are for western big game.
WHAT??
No. No, its not. out of a 70 Lb bow that's a light weight 6.5 grains per pound.
5 to 6 grains per pound is light weight
7 and 8 is mid weight
9 and up is a heavy weight.
Im at about 11 grains per pound.