Bender,
I see your point but I am not sure the arrow speed is the answer. Shot from the same bow at the same draw length, a lighter arrow of equal length will travel faster than a heavy arrow of equal length. Absolutely and with out a doubt, but I think the flatter trajectory does not increase the accuracy.
I could be totally wet on this (not uncommon for me) but here is how I see it:
If we use the tip of the arrow as an aim point, we shoot the lighter arrow (say 400 grains total weight, equaling 8grs. per pound of bow weight) holding 2 inches above the bull’s-eye. With a clean release and everything else correct (I know, not very likely for me, but hey, it's an example) we get a 4 inch group at 15 yards.
Then, shooting a heavy arrow (say 650 grains total weight, equaling 13grs. per pound of bow weight) of the same length and spine, tuned just as well as the lighter arrow, we hold 6 inches above the bull’s-eye and get an 8 inch group.
As long as the aim point is consistent (2" above for the light arrow and 6" above for the heavy arrow) this is repeatable. We get tighter groups with the light arrows than with the heavy arrows at 15 yards shooting distance. Now, this is from my own experience.
To me, even though the lighter arrow is faster than the heavy arrow, using the consistent aim point says to me that there is some other thing going on besides the flatter trajectory helping out.
Could it be that the increased speed allows less time for me to screw up the shot? Maybe, but at 20 and 25 yards shooting distance, using a consistent aim point there is little to no difference in the size of my groups. The lighter arrow groups get a little bigger, and the heavy arrow groups actually get a little smaller. The speeds that the arrows leave the bow are the same at 15 yards as they are at 20 and 25 yards. This tells me the situation has something to do with the way the arrow is flying over that shorter distance, not in how fast it is flying.
I dunno. Like I said, I am not much of an expert and can only really report what I see with my own shooting. It's really only an interesting diversion for me since I don't hunt with the light arrows. I only use them for the occasional round of 3-d shooting.
What do ya think?
OkKeith