A few weeks ago I rescued a 1974 Howatt Hi-Speed from a guy's man cave. He told me he hadn't shot it in years, was just decorating the wall. It was supposed to be 45# at 28". I assumed it was 58", and he never mentioned it was 54", Was quite a surprise when it arrived!
Took quite a bit of scrubbing to remove the years of nicotine and grime.
It has a new 16 strand string (rope) on it, or at least not shot much, nock set wasn't clamped real tight. So after cleaning, I strung it, and head out back. Sure doesn't feel like 45#, but it's 4" shorter that all my other Hi-Speeds.
Whoa! Sure doesn't shoot like the 50+#s I expected either! Last few inches of my 30" draw are a little stubborn, but I expected that, to a point. The 2213/125 I just shot hit way left, shot a 2215/150, centered, shot another 5, it feels like mid 50#s.
So I set up my bow scale system. Tie off bow, tie D loop on string, hook scale into D loop, nock measured arrow, pull rope thru a couple pulleys..
36.57# at 24"
38.97# at 25" +2.4#
41.9 # at 26" +2.93#
44.84 at 27" +2.94#
48.18 at 28" +3.34#
51.79 at 29" +3.61#
56.89# at 30" +5.1#
Kinda funny, one of the reasons I wanted this bow was its color and serial number(HS4 1623). It was made 27 bows after my gifted ( my first Howatt) 50# Hi-Speed(HS4 1596), that peaks at 56#. Weighs 50.01 at 28"
Wanted to see if it was as close to it's marked weight.
But back to the title of this thread. After I weighted the bow and took it back out to shoot some more, I looked closely at the Specs and sure enough, Pearl added a X.
Actually pretty mild mannered until I lock into full draw. Think I need to re-test them thru the chrony, current results show 1596 5fps faster (165.5 fps) than 1623(160.49fps) despite the almost # difference in draw weight. Might be that tow rope it's strung with.