Wait why would the weight be added to the front of the 300? It wouldn’t be tuned. The 300 is higher gpi.
One of the parameters you stated in the initial post was that both arrows are the same weight. A 300 spine shaft has a lower gpi than a 250, so you have to add weight somewhere.
The 250 to be tuned to the same setup has the weight added to the front and is lower gpi.
300 is lower gpi than 250. You add wall thickness to get a stiffer spine arrow. I'm pretty sure you know this and are just mixing it up. Spine only matters in this excercise at the launch, not at impact. I'll explain below.
Both total weight the same.
Right. I'm also assuming they are otherwise identical for length, fletching, etc.
Let me rephrase so I understand.
When both are tuned to the same setup with the varying point weights and gpi but both static spine and dynamic matches(250-250 300-300) they would flex the exact same amount on impact? Correct?
The only case where a stiffer spine would out penetrate a weaker spine is if they both were 250 static but one was dynamic 260(stiff) and the other 240(weak)?
Outside of extreme examples like a 32" 500 spine shaft, spine ONLY matters at the launch of the arrow from the bow. It dictates flex and recovery characteristics. The string imparts the bow's force to the nock, the shaft transfers it to the point, and overcomes the inertia the point has to stay stationary. This flexes the shaft and creates the need to pick a stiff enough shaft for flex (buckling) control.
Upon impact, the force is reversed. The force of whatever you just shot the arrow into acts on the tip, then transfers down the shaft to the nock. The nock end has very little inertia to keep moving because it is light and the shaft itself doesn't weight much either, so it only has to support it's own weight so to speak. As long as the point penetrates, there is very little flex of the shaft to create drag. If the point stops suddenly, though, all that energy gets expelled somewhere and it flexes a ton.
Where you would get penetration issues from spine is if you shoot an out of tune setup or the arrow impacts before it recovers. In these two cases, the arrow point will not impact with the shaft in line with the force vector. The shaft is flexing, or fishtailing and energy is expended straightening that out as it penetrates.
Jeremy
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