I’m only posting this as not long ago, there was a conversation about point weight matched between broadhead and field point and how some or many can find themselves going the extra mile to make those 2 numbers match dead on. I think we all head straight for that goal as it should make sense...... however many grains up front that makes an arrow fly true is what you go with and should yield great results barring all other things being sound.
Well, recently got a new bow, different poundage than usual, time to tune some carbon: after tinkering for a couple weeks with the finest details and bare shafting adnauseam, I was getting satisfying results (essentially perfect) with a 500 spine arrow cut to 29.25 inches with 200 grains of point. I draw 27 and drawing 46# at that 27 with this new bow. Practically perfect arrow flight with accuracy past 20 yards, before fletching. So I’m shooting lots with complete arrows and stretching it out to and a little past the 40 yrd mark and I’m 100 percent confident I built the right arrow. Time to go to broadheads: 160 VPA 3 blade on the long aluminum adapter gives me a matching point weight to my field points - 201 grains. They shoot pretty good, but I feel they could be a touch better to show lights out on the target. For grins, I take the same broadhead glued to a 75 gr STEEL adapter from another arrow, check the spin, spins perfectly........ shoot.....dead nuts on perfect and the sound is even a bit different-better! more of a heavy thud at release vs a slightly sharper thud sound. I’m honestly a bit intrigued by that detail.
This is a 35 grain point weight difference....... accuracy is dead on with both arrows, field point and broadhead, but 2 different point weights. Trajectory is no different between the 2 out to 35 yrds...... a distance I’m not going to shoot animals at. All other details with tuning and my form, release everything, is on point. I guess what I want to convey with regard to point weight matching, is to not always get hung up on that ..... broadheads that fly true and don’t have a drastically different trajectory, is the goal. And it’s not always going to be an exact match to your field point.