Originally posted by Jim Keller:
thanks for the help guys. I'll keep working at it. When I think of traditional shooting, I think simplicity. Ain't nothing simple about tuning these things is there?
Not at first for me anyway at least on all the bows I have been playing with this year. You may only have a bow, sting, and arrow, but all the form stuff and bow variations can take some time to work out. When I was first getting back into trad bows serious I was getting things tuned only to find the tune changed as my form and release improved.
I have more trouble with LB’s than curves due to the grips. Some bows work out great bare shafting and some not so great. I would try group shooting fletched and bare shafts. Get a selection of point weights to test spine before you cut.
I struggled with a high nock on my new bow, but gave up and worked with the best I could get. I have perfect broad head flight so I forgot about it.
Also watch the nock setting. I had one bow recently that was too low on the nock, and the arrow was just hitting off the edge of the shelf with carbons. That was causing me a constant weak reading. I did get it tuned great, but when I got the nock set up higher all of a sudden I was way stiff and had to load them up to get the arrows right.
I have a LB now that is cut to center, and I put way more point weight than I should need on the arrows and the kept showing stiff. The best I can do is get them to shoot about straight with a bare shaft. I can’t get them to go weak with any reasonable amount of point weight. I can’t figure that out, but I did find it grouped best with one particular point weight and the fletched arrows are darts with that point so I am sticking with it.
I group shoot trad bows. I paper shoot compounds. If you paper shoot a trad bow I would shoot farther away, and I would shoot a fletched shaft. Even cut to center you are not center shot like a modern compound, and without a release you are not going to shoot as well. You need to allow some reasonable distance for arrow stabilization.