Ken, I don't think competition in archery needs to be any less enjoyable or less popular than it is in any other sport. I mean, who doesn't like the challenge of matching skills with others who practice the same sport regardless of what the sport is? Shooting for points can be as much 'fun' as stumpshooting with friends on the back forty. But, I do think you're right about the equipment aspect. Other things being equal its much easier to be consistently accurate (score points) with advanced bows and arrows than it is with the older styles...thus the reason we separate recurves from primitive, don't use Hill bows and wood arrows in the Olympics, etc. etc. I guess thats why I thought arrow weight (heavy arrows are harder to shoot high 3-D scores with than are light arrows regardless of bow type) might help even out the field a bit at shoots.
I'm not really sure why having a few rules to even out the fairness aspect equates to taking all the 'fun' out of shooting, but apparently for many it does. I do like the idea of separating wood (heavy) and carbon (light) arrows and Hill-style bows vs. DAS/Warfs/GameMasters types when it comes to competitions. Thats not a cheap shot at any particular type of gear. It just makes the competitive aspect fairer in the overall by having similar "stuff" compete against each other similar "stuff" without undue advantages/disadvantages involved...not unlike whats done for car racing, boxing matches, firearms competitions, etc. Some might say that if competition is the goal then its up to the shooter to use the most advanced gear they can get so they can maximize their chance to win. Maybe, but all that does is universally favor hi-tech at the expense of low tech...not a good thing in my view.
Its hard to find a middle ground on this stuff without one group or the other crying foul...either being called a traditional elitist or a techno-geek, lol. I think thats the source of alot of needless friction between stickbowers these days...refusal by folks of each persuasion to recognize and accept differences in gear not because one or the other is 'better' but for the sake of fairness and common sense in comparing, using or competing with that gear.
Anyway, thanks for your input.