This has been my sole reason for not wading into the heavy FOC world. Shooting instinctive, I just seem to have a natural feel for the trajectory of my 560-ish grain arrows.I’m down to about 535gr and my brain likes the gaps a lot more with that.
This has been my sole reason for not wading into the heavy FOC world. Shooting instinctive, I just seem to have a natural feel for the trajectory of my 560-ish grain arrows.I’m down to about 535gr and my brain likes the gaps a lot more with that.
Hmm. Interesting. I played around with bare shafts and a heavy field tip test kit. I have no idea what the FOC was on different arrows, as I was just tinkering, but when I screwed on that 300grain field tip, that arrow just seemed slow and arching. Past 15 yards, I was hitting low every time. I don’t know if it was a mental thing or what.Total arrow weight of a tuned arrow is what affects trajectory much more than a particular FOC of a tuned arrow. If anything, I have noticed a heavy 30%+ FOC shows a flatter trajectory than the same weight arrow of much lower FOC. I actually thought I was seeing things the first time I noticed it. Then I heard Dr. Ashby confirmed the same observation. I can’t seem to find any negatives of extreme FOC this far. But like has been already mentioned, we don’t all have the same objectives.
Your total arrow weight was maximized as well with that heavier point. Arrow may or may not have been tuned.I have no idea what the FOC was on different arrows, as I was just tinkering, but when I screwed on that 300grain field tip, that arrow just seemed slow and arching. Past 15 yards, I was hitting low every time. I don’t know if it was a mental thing or what.
I’m glad you said this. I noticed this as well. Neither moving nocking point nor lowering brace height would fix nock high. I thought I was screwing something up!In my case, I have noticed when bareshaftimg heavy high FOC arrows it will hit a bit nock high after getting left and right dynamic spine correct.
Yup, I've noticed the same thing.I’m glad you said this. I noticed this as well. Neither moving nocking point nor lowering brace height would fix nock high. I thought I was screwing something up!
I went down the ultra heavy EFOC rabbit hole years ago. I was shooting well tuned 750 grain arrows with 400 grains of tip weight, out of a 64 lb recurve. I found that my trajectory was better with an arrow that was well tuned and 100 grains lighter. I know what I've seen in my personal tuning, but I won't deny those heavy arrows hit damn hard.
I just realized it was overkill for anything I could imagine shooting. 550-600 grain arrows at 185 fps is going to wreck anything in North America. I get a cheat code with my 32" draw and I will take full advantage of it.
Also true, until you have a 32" draw. Haha! We all have to work with what we've got and optimize for our draw length, release, etc.With today's carbons it's pretty simple to build an efoc arrow in the mid 500s. I got one for my 45# thats at 29percent foc and 586gr total arrow weight. Haven't shot that bow in quite some time but I watched that combo blow through a deer from stem to stern. Went in the front of the chest, broke 2 ribs, broke the pelvis and poked out the hide of the rear ham.
this is an Ashby claim in his published study decades ago that was debunked by actual scientists [physics guys that shoot archery from UC Berkeley] He pulled his study though he persists with the claim. Its bogus.
I have a 29.75 inch draw. Not quite the albatross arms you got lol, but there are plenty of shafts out there now that are crazy stiff with a very low gpi.Also true, until you have a 32" draw. Haha! We all have to work with what we've got and optimize for our draw length, release, etc.
Perhaps in a vacuum. But in the real world a high foc arrow requires less fletching. Resulting in less drag, and even more importantly, it has less of a lever effect in a cross wind.Then you defied the laws of Physics....this is an Ashby claim in his published study decades ago that was debunked by actual scientists [physics guys that shoot archery from UC Berkeley] He pulled his study though he persists with the claim. Its bogus. It works with the rubber bands and weighted straws he used to develop his "Theory" but its simply not true.
A very high FOC arrow does not fly further....or have better trajectory of a same weight arrow.
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I already explained how it works. Believe what you like.You guys remember Sir Isaac Newton from your HS science class?
Its an undisputed law of physics and Ashby’s claim that more FOC carries further or has better trajectory is simply not true.
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