After some trial and a lot of frustration, I think I've arrived at an arrow that shoots reasonably well for me. Except that in the process I ended up with a lot more point weight than originally planned.
If I use Stu Miller's spine calculator to come up with a spine number for these arrows, and then calculate "backwards" by changing shaft type/deflection and point weight to arrive at the same spine number, will these "new" arrows be close to what I need?
I figure yes, but maybe someone has some experience with this. I realize of course it will only be approximate specs, and will have to be tested and tweaked on the range.
Details:
Morrison ILF recurve w/ glass foam limbs. 45 lbs at my 27" draw length. Shooting 3-under.
Arrows: Carbon Express Blue Streak 250 = 0.413 deflection, cut to 29 5/8" BOP. 50 grain brass insert, 3 x 4" feathers, 5.5" double-dog Onestringer wraps.
Originally 145 grain points, but now up to 200 grain points.
As my form improved - not great but improved
from what it was - my arrows started to fly worse. After a lot of frustration I finally increased point weight and at 200 grain the arrows fly much better.
I could of course stick with what works now, but would like to keep the arrow weight around 450 grains for ~10 GPP