Kirk, I agree, but when shooting through chronographs testing for speed with a certain arrow weight I want a correct draw weight, in order to measure the accurate arrow speed. Maybe I am a bit hung up on accuracy, but thats the way I am.
I understand completely….But If you are using the same scale to compare one bow to another, these scales work just fine… Even if you were testing different bows for the public…. They still work just fine as long as you use the same scale all the time.
but you may want to upgrade to a certified scale with a higher degree of accuracy that can be calibrated with a certified weight.
Testing bows accurately for your own data references just requires consistency.
Testing bows accurately for the public will always be contested no matter how consistent you are. Even using two chronographs in tandem, with infrared light kits indoors, a certified scale, a good shooting machine, and matching GPP on your arrows perfectly… your results will still be considered skewed, and contested by the public…. I finally gave up the effort myself…
I tell my customers to go shoot the bow I just built them side by side with a comparable draw weight bow at 40-50 yards and see which arrow is in the dirt or the target…. That will tell the tale real quickly….