And, would more consistent, fact-based regulations be valuable for our sport? Promote hunting across state boundaries for more people? Simplify choosing your next bow?
We've all seen many, many threads on is XX# draw weight enough for (deer, elk, bear,...). Always the caveat of State regs crops up. State regulations vary quite a bit. I'm in Washington state where a minimum hunting bow weight is 40# @ 28". Our southern neighbors in OR can hunt deer with a 40# bow and elk with a 50# bow (at their draw length). Seems simple. But with my 29.5" draw length that means I can hunt deer with a ~36.5#@28" bow in Oregon (~40# @ 29.5"), and a 43+# @29.5" in WA. That's a pretty big difference.
Both of the regulation approaches above overlook/ignore a key fact: draw length, not just draw weight, is a key variable in how much energy is delivered to an arrow. An arrow shot by a bow drawn 40#@30" has much more energy than one drawn to 40# at 26". In one interview I heard an olympic coach guesstimate that at a given draw weight (40#), an extra inch of draw is worth an additional 8-10# of bow weight, and that is one reason why the vast majority of successful olympic archers have long draw lengths: they can shoot lighter bows and maintain arrow performance.
We all know that shot placement is king, and arrow flight, arrow weight, FOC, broadhead choice, etc. are all very important too, and get more important as the force delivered to the arrow approaches some (unknown) minimum.
What are examples of the best State equipment regulations? And, is there a very simple formula that would be more effective at assessing equipment capabilities that could be adopted broadly?
p.s. probably should have waited until after hunting season for this type of post!