Is Bareshaft tuning a requirement?

Dave_S

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Dec 17, 2022
Messages
105
I'll start off by saying maybe this is a stupid question. I just bought a bow last year and plan to hunt with it for the first time this fall. I know I will need to tune for broadheads, and I think I understand why paper tuning first is important. My understanding is basically that this will get major corrections out of the way before you add in the broadhead. Seems like lots of folks have different methods, but most involve starting with bareshaft. Is this something that is 100% necessary? I'm not at the point where I am fletching my own arrows, and I kind of hate to think about shaving off fletching if I don't have to. Can I just start paper tuning with my fletched shafts and move on? Looking forward to getting schooled.
 

ElGuapo

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Sep 30, 2017
Messages
228
Location
Reno, Nv
No doubt 9 out of 10 guys will tell you, that tuning fletched shafts is perfectly adequate. When I learned to tune bare shaft THEN Fletch, it completely eliminated erratic broadhead flight for me. I believe fletching hides a lot of flaws in the tuning process.
 
Joined
Jun 21, 2019
Messages
2,553
Location
Missouri
Bareshaft tuning is not necessary; neither is paper tuning. For a hunter, broadhead tuning is the only 100% necessary form of tuning IMO.

I personally shoot through paper for initial ballpark tuning, then shoot bareshafts to refine, then shoot broadheads as final verification. Paper tuning is nice because it can be done at close range indoors. Bareshaft tuning is done with field points so it saves wear on your target. But you hunt with a broadhead on a fletched shaft, so that needs to be your final (or only if you prefer) method of tuning.
 
Joined
Nov 3, 2014
Messages
625
Location
Montana
Not required. If you have the time though you can have a bare shaft impact right with it or a little high. This will save you a lot of time with broadheads and possibly a ruined head depending on how far off you are/how good bow is set up and paper tuned
 

sndmn11

"DADDY"
Joined
Mar 28, 2017
Messages
10,307
Location
Morrison, Colorado
I personally shoot through paper for initial ballpark tuning, then shoot bareshafts to refine, then shoot broadheads as final verification. Paper tuning is nice because it can be done at close range indoors. Bareshaft tuning is done with field points so it saves wear on your target. But you hunt with a broadhead on a fletched shaft, so that needs to be your final (or only if you prefer) method of tuning.

This is my process as well.

I have found that if you bare shafts or broadheads flying fine the other will too.
 

Zac

WKR
Joined
Dec 1, 2018
Messages
2,526
Location
UT
Going straight to broadheads is just fine. I usually fire a couple through paper just to make sure I don't plane off and miss my entire broadhead target.
 

Jbehredt

WKR
Joined
Mar 4, 2017
Messages
1,779
Location
Colorado
I skip paper at least partly because I set up my own bows at home and don’t have a rack for paper tuning. Start with bare shaft and then broadheads. I like bare shaft tuning because it will also reveal grip or form inconsistencies that can come with a new bow. I can’t recall ever having to do more than bump my rest a mm to get broadheads dialed after grouping a bare shaft with fletched arrows at 20 yds.
 

Beendare

WKR
Joined
May 6, 2014
Messages
9,001
Location
Corripe cervisiam
I would say tuning in general IS a requirement…but many ways to accomplish it. Typically, I use the fastest method and sometimes skip steps when I feel good about the initial setup.

In a compound, I sometimes skip right to shooting BHs for groups at longer range. I sometimes used to papertune, but its worth noting you can overshoot slightly with a paper tune…then when adjusting your rest for BHs you might have to go a tiny bit ( never more than a 1/16”) in the opposite direction as recommended by the tuning guides.

If a compound is shooting a bullet hole in paper, I have never had to move my rest more than a 1/16” in any direction to ge it to BH tune. If thats not working…you might be underspined.

I bareshaft tune in my recurve as those are very picky on arrow spine and there is no rest to adjust.

.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Feb 24, 2012
Messages
4,908
Location
Colorado
I like to do it. If your bareshaft is flying and hitting the same as your fletch you got a well tuned bow in my opinion
 

nphunter

WKR
Joined
Jul 27, 2016
Messages
1,954
Location
Oregon
The only thing that really matters is your that broadheads hit where you are aiming. Lots of ways to accomplish that. Regardless of all of the other ways to tune, you still may have to make minor adjustments once you put on broadheads. Once you do that all the rest of the tuning you have done will change, just don’t go back and check the others once broadheads fly like they should, doing that will drive you nuts.
 

gelton

WKR
Joined
May 15, 2013
Messages
2,510
Location
Central Texas
I like to check my tune often which means that bare shaft tuning is a necessity unless you have endless money to buy new targets.

Broadhead tuning is superior, and I always switch to it 30-60 days before hunting season but BS will get you close enough and save you $$ in the long run.
 
Joined
Feb 24, 2012
Messages
4,908
Location
Colorado
I like to check my tune often which means that bare shaft tuning is a necessity unless you have endless money to buy new targets.

Broadhead tuning is superior, and I always switch to it 30-60 days before hunting season but BS will get you close enough and save you $$ in the long run.
Yea I agree. Broadheads are the end result. But a bareshaft acts like a broadhead tipped arrow. So if I tune and my bare shafts are shooting good my broadheads shoot good to

I then go back to further distance and will
Fine tune the broadheads. But the bareshaft tune initially gives me less headache for broadheads
 
OP
D

Dave_S

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Dec 17, 2022
Messages
105
Yea I agree. Broadheads are the end result. But a bareshaft acts like a broadhead tipped arrow. So if I tune and my bare shafts are shooting good my broadheads shoot good to

I then go back to further distance and will
Fine tune the broadheads. But the bareshaft tune initially gives me less headache for broadheads
I'm a little confused by this. I thought that big reason you need to broadhead tune was because you now have added the steering of the broadhead to the steering of the vanes. Wouldn't a bareshaft just remove all steering from the equation and be more indicative of the input from the bow rather than the input from the arrow?

Sent from my SM-G981U using Tapatalk
 

Trial153

WKR
Joined
Oct 28, 2014
Messages
8,225
Location
NY
I tune a bow to get clean bare shaft holes at 3 and 10 yards. From that point I can’t recall the last time my broadheads and field points weren’t with my margin of error.
So while it not a necessity. I don’t see the down side at all. In fact it’s all upside as l don’t have to mess with BH tuning other then confirming the same POI at various distances
 
Top