I recently had an experience with carbon arrow selection that has taken me aback. The background. I am shooting a new bow – DAS/Dalaa takedown recurve, 55# @ 28”, with carbon/foam limbs. I draw about 29”. I have tentatively selected two shafts to evaluate:
1) Alaska Bowhunter’s Momentum (6580), cut to 30” with 4-4” fletching. This is a tapered shaft with an advertised deflection of .330. With a 250 grain point, this arrow shoots great (and bare shafts well) out of my new bow, but is on the margin of being too weak.
2) Arrow Dynamics Traditional. A tapered shaft cut and fletched the same as above; advertised as having a deflection of .275. With a 250 grain point it also flies well but is on the verge of being too stiff.
Given the above results, I decided to try an Easton Axis Nano 300 shaft with an advertised deflection of .300 (that is, right in the mid-range between the two shafts above!). Cut to the same length, fletched similarly, and with a 250 grain point, however, it is way too stiff!
Why these results? This indicates that the so-called standards are not really all that standard among manufacturers. I near as I could determine, all the shafts were measured with the ASTM standard, but perhaps this in not true. Perhaps in this case it’s due to comparing tapered shafts against a parallel shaft, combined with the fact that the deflection of a tapered shaft depends on how the manufacturer positions the shaft on the spine tester. In any event I am stymied and hesitant to do more experimentation based on the rated deflection number. Any ideas?