i've spent too much time and money deciphering what carbon shafting to use for various bows. here are some text excerpts i have recently pm'd to another member ...
all of the following are my beliefs and opinons - it's what works for me and ymmv!if you adhere to the carbon spine charts, you're in for troubles. the carbon stiffness range for any carbon arrow is double or triple that of alums or woods. that's how it is imo.
my carbon shaft/arrow testing has settled down to cheap 29.5" beman ics 500 venture/bowhunter for my 29" 56# holding weight.
a critical component is to set the arrow up with as high an foc as possible - at least 20%, and more is absolutely better.
my typical hunting arrow uses 350 grains up front for 29% foc and a total weight of 590 grains for 10.7 gpp. for tough animals like big hogs, i up the entire shaft weight to at least 650 grains, sometimes 710 grains. i add the weight by changing both the broadhead and screw in adapter weight. those really heavy arras are into the 35% foc range.
IF you have a decent consistent shooting style, with a reasonably clean split finger release, high foc carbons will spit out like darts and there are NO tuning issues.
i want to build and use an arrow that has an acceptable amount of weight, at least 10 gpp - all my hunting arrows are at least 10.5 gpp to as high as 12 gpp. i want to dial in as much foc as possible. my hunting arrows range from 29-35% foc.
with carbon arrows, since their spine charts are all off and stiffer than needed, i'll go lots lower in carbon spine rating for all my arrows. remember, carbon shafting is VERY different from both wood and alum shafting - LOTS stiffer! as a result, sticking on lots more upfront weight will rarely, if ever, reduce the spine so much that a stiffer arrow shaft is required.
i DON'T BOTHER to bare shaft tune. just cut the shaft to length, glue in the ferrule with epoxy, fletch up, add the appropriate point weight (broadhead epoxied to an adapter), shoot.
FOC - (Front Of Center) - there's NO question that high foc arrows fly and penetrate better than low foc arrows. you want as much weight up front as possible. this is easiest to do with carbons - use a glue-on broadhead (125 grains) epoxied to a heavy steel adapter (75-125 grain) screwed in to a heavy brass (50-100 grain) ferrule. this will achieve the highest foc possible. using a screw-in broadhead (125-150 grains) into an aluminum ferrule (40 grains) is the lowest foc (not the way to go, NOT good!!).
here's a link to my arrow calculation spreadsheet charts for both foc and gpp, just plug in your numbers ...
http://tradgang.com/noncgi/ultimatebb.php?ubb=get_topic;f=2;t=000089 FLETCHING - your call, 3 or 4 fletch. i prefer 4" banana cut 75x105 4-fletch. with carbons, USE THE BOHNING FLETCHING TAPE! do not bother using glue! after fletching, put a tiny dot of glue at the front and back of each fletch. they will NOT come off during shooting or hunting and yet are relatively easy to strip off if refletching is needed. i've found 6 to 12 month old lost tape fletched arrows buried in the bushes and the fletchings are as solid as the day i put 'em on.
TUNING ARROWS - ok, here's all the important details on how to tune your new carbon arrows to your new whizbang stickbow ....
shoot the arrows.
that's it.
arrows wag left or right in flight (or in the butt at 15 yards or more) - LOOK AT YOUR SHOOTING FORM and RELEASE. there is NO substitute for good mechanical form AND a clean release! <--- read that again and again and again, this is the gospel of bow shooting.
arrows go up or down or porpoise - ADJUST THE BOWSTRING NOCKING POINT.
there, now that was easy, eh? :D
in addition, if your bow can handle modern string fiber, drop down the strand count. i see too many 50-60# bows still using 14-16 strands of ff when 12 is way plenty ... better yet, drop down to 10 or 8 strands - your release will be even quieter. admittedly, low string strand count can hint at a more delicate string, but 8 strands is still plenty durable even when crawling through dense bush. for practical reasons, i'd never go below 4 strands. in all of the preceding statements, the modern string fiber i'm referring to has a nomninal strand diameter comparable to df'97 - this excludes the ultra thing F8125 and the overly thick 450+.
hope some of this helps and best of luck afield.