Originally posted by Sam McMichael:
Although I only shoot wood, these threads are interesting. If I ever decide to go to man made materials in arrows, I will at least have a starting point to be able to ask intelligent questions.
I do have a question about paper tuning, particularly at very close distances. It seems to me that at 5 yards, any release problem, ever how slight, could have very significant effect on the paper hole. Am I way off base here? Or, do you tune to accommodate your personal "normal" release?
You are not off base at all! In fact, you are spot on. I do my main tuning with paper. I guess, according to the posts above, my arrows are not tuned because paper tuning is useless for trad bows!
I start out at 6 feet from the paper, and shoot fletched arrows, and adjust until I have the hole I want. I then move back to about 15 feet to confirm the close up results. If you go any further back than that, you will likely see false results because the arrow flight is being stabilized and corrected by the feathers. This system has worked well for me for years and I have very well tuned arrows that will shoot well with feathers laid down in the rain, in stiff winds, and other like situations. I also get quite a few pass-throughs on animals, and I get entry and exit holes in nearly 100%. The only time I do not get exit hole is when I get tied up in the off-side shoulder bones. My draw weight is on the lighter side, 50# at my DL.
For paper tuning to effectively tell you what you need to do, you HAVE to have a pretty clean and consistent release. It will just drive you nuts if you don't have a good consistent release. In fact, you have to have pretty consistent form in general. I do not bare shaft tune, but I would assume that an erratic release or inconsistent form would mess that up some too???
Bisch