I did a bunch of bareshaft shooting today mixed in with a few fletched shots. I used 125, 145, 175, 200, and 300 grain field points. Bow is 64# @28, with the bear weather rest somewhere between 5/8 and 3/4" out from center. I'm left handed, and using 100 grain brass inserts. Initially, I started with 300 grain, and all my arrows visually looked like they were kicking nock right in flight and going left on the target, even though they'd be sticking nock left in the target. I think they just rebounded the other direction upon impact.
That would indicate weak spine. I did a bunch of shooting with all of the field point weights and the 145 shot the best. The arrows would nosedive a bit but the nock left/right was minimal on average. With 145 grain tips I'd only be at around 537 grains, or 8.4gpp. That seems a little lighter than what's commonly recommended for hunting. It was a bit louder too than the heavy arrows. I chopped off 1/2 an inch from the arrows. Then the 175 grain tips started shooting better. After that, things started going downhill, as I'd been shooting well over an hour and probably fatiguing. The 145s shot good, then the 300s shot good, I'd shoot both and get good arrows one shot and bad another, so I quit for the day.
If my bow ends up liking 145 grain tips the best, is that okay with only 8.4gpp? Or should I try adding tip and rear weight, or adding external footing past the insert to reduce the bending length to shoot a heavier arrow? Also, even when the bare shafts were flying nice, the fletched ones didn't necessarily hit the same spot. They'd commonly be hitting to the right, even with good arrow flight. Sometimes they'd be pretty close to one another, but not always. Due to the limited quantities in the field tip practice packs, I'm limited to 2 field tips at each weight, which isn't ideal for shooting and comparing groups.
Or, since traditional archery is new to me, should I just slap on 175 grain tips with giant fletching and work on form and grouping before attempting to fine tune more?