I match my arrow and bow to what I consider best for my shooting style. I usually draw 75# with multiple bows. I build my arrows so that I have at least 13-15% FOC to ensure good momentum carries to target. My total arrow weight fluctuates a little depending on which bow I'm shooting. Let's just use my Mathews V3 31 at 75# I shoot a 4mm victory VAP SS it leaves the bow at 280 fps and weighs in at 490 grains with a cut on contact 125 grn fixed blade broad head. This set up is at a little over 15% FOC but has very little drag and great trajectory. I do not have to worry about vertical obstruction from 0-40 yards in the timber which is one of the most critical factors for me. It penetrates better than any other arrow I have shot from this bow and is extremely tough. I've had pass through on all the elk I have shot with this set up. When I build arrows for any bow I look at these factors and that is how I decide.What are everyone's opinions/experiences on arrow weights?
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I match my arrow and bow to what I consider best for my shooting style. I usually draw 75# with multiple bows. I build my arrows so that I have at least 13-15% FOC to ensure good momentum carries to target. My total arrow weight fluctuates a little depending on which bow I'm shooting. Let's just use my Mathews V3 31 at 75# I shoot a 4mm victory VAP SS it leaves the bow at 280 fps and weighs in at 490 grains with a cut on contact 125 grn fixed blade broad head. This set up is at a little over 15% FOC but has very little drag and great trajectory. I do not have to worry about vertical obstruction from 0-40 yards in the timber which is one of the most critical factors for me. It penetrates better than any other arrow I have shot from this bow and is extremely tough. I've had pass through on all the elk I have shot with this set up. When I build arrows for any bow I look at these factors and that is how I decide.
Solid advice here. I'm a fan of my setup with a 3 blade at 445 grains, moving 294 fps. Which is on the higher end of speed I like with fixed.With modern bows you don’t need to follow the Ashby method. To each their own but you don’t need a 600gr arrow and a huge cut on contact spear point broadhead to get a pass through or penetrate enough to hit the vitals on an elk.
A 450gr arrow that paper tunes good and most 3 blade fixed broadheads will do the job inside of 60 yards everytime at just about every angle other than the Texas heart shot.