As my artificial shoulders get stronger and stronger, I am able to shoot a little more bow.
I have a Bear TD that has not been used since my shoulders began to go bad a few years ago, but now that I am getting stronger I decided to give it a try.
It is an A-wood riser bow with #1 limbs marked 47 pounds at 28" -- that would make it 48 or 49 pounds at my draw length. I remembered that these particular limbs were very, very smooth on the draw with an A-mag riser I used to have them on years ago. They ought to be great on the wood riser.
Well, I started experimenting with some bare-shaft arrows I had on hand. I tried a 500 carbon with 200 grains up front. It shot a little noisy and a touch weak. So, I went to a 400 carbon with 290 grains up front -- still weak. Then a 400 with 250 up front, same result. So, I trimmed 1/4 inch off of the 400 shaft, still weak. I reduced the weight up front some more, still weak.
This was not making any sense.
Then I noticed that my side plate had developed a pretty obvious skid mark that looked like years of wear. What's that all about? Well.....just maybe.....
Then I thought that maybe I was getting side bounce off of the sight window. I looked at the riser very carefully and noticed that it was cut a bit less than center shot. Maybe the arrow spine needed to be a bit weaker to clear the riser during paradox. Maybe I was getting a false-weak reading from the shaft bouncing off of the side plate because everything I was trying to shoot was too stiff.
So, I went back to the 500 spine shaft at 29.5" and loaded up the front with a 100 grain insert and a 190 grain point ------- perfect bare shaft flight. And the bow became almost totally silent.
It just goes to show you that the charts and bare shaft calculators are not necessarily right. The individual bow knows what's right -- and I just needed to understand what it was trying to tell me.
Now I'll make up some arrows for this bow, and I will surely hunt with it.
I just wanted to share that sometimes the shaft and point weight combination that "should" work actually won't work --- and that bare shaft tuning is a process that will lead to the best possible combination of arrow shaft and point weight.