Bigborealaska
WKR
Help me answer this. Archers put so much emphasis on the proper bow it has to be fast or it has to be xyz and then they fail to properly tune said bow and buy off the shelf arrows with no knowledge of correct spine and shaft length or anything else that factors in to a good setup for actual success.
A good archer knows his equipment and will know what spine arrows he's shooting and what fletches work the best for the broadhead he has and his overall arrow weight. He tunes his bow to his arrows and is efficient to his max distance of 40, 50, 60 or whatever distance it is.
I see people buy a recommended bow and then throw everything else together on looks like arrows, fletch, broadheads and then when they don't penerate or shoot well it comes down to a bunch of excuses. Why do people do this is it lack of knowledge or being lazy?
The bow and tune is extremely important but the arrow is more important in my opinion as that's what kills the animal, yet people don't put as much effort into ensuring what's being projected at the animal is set up for their bow.
A good archer knows his equipment and will know what spine arrows he's shooting and what fletches work the best for the broadhead he has and his overall arrow weight. He tunes his bow to his arrows and is efficient to his max distance of 40, 50, 60 or whatever distance it is.
I see people buy a recommended bow and then throw everything else together on looks like arrows, fletch, broadheads and then when they don't penerate or shoot well it comes down to a bunch of excuses. Why do people do this is it lack of knowledge or being lazy?
The bow and tune is extremely important but the arrow is more important in my opinion as that's what kills the animal, yet people don't put as much effort into ensuring what's being projected at the animal is set up for their bow.