Home
Posted By: nclonghunter Heaviest point? - 01/21/12
What is the heaviest point you have shot from a compound using carbon arrows?

I recently added a 50gr brass insert and 125gr point. My arrows are shooting well.
Posted By: Seminole39 Re: Heaviest point? - 01/21/12
I have never ventured over the 100gr mark

Have you chronoed this set up?
Posted By: fat_daddy Re: Heaviest point? - 01/21/12
[Linked Image]
Posted By: nclonghunter Re: Heaviest point? - 01/21/12
Never have chronoed any of my bows. Just not something I have worried about.

I like the design of the Montec G5 cut on contact and also the Muzzy Phantom (100gr)cut on contact broadheads.

Just tried a 145gr field point with the 50gr brass insert. The arrow was a little slower, the bow was super quiet and the arrow penetrated deep in a block target.

I used to shoot a Hoyt compound at 62 pounds, 31" 2216 XX75 arrows with 5 inch feathers and 145gr razorback broadheads. Great shooting combination. Got a new bow, new carbons, small vanes and lighter points. Just doesn't seem right now. Going to a heavier point again and bigger feathers and it already feels better. No science here, just what feels right.
Posted By: Seminole39 Re: Heaviest point? - 01/21/12
I would venture to say you increased the kinectic energy of your arrow by 35-40% with that combo. That will be one hard hitting set-up.
Posted By: MontanaCreekHunter Re: Heaviest point? - 01/22/12
No need for all that weight. You are lossing speed that at this point is more benefical to you. 100gr-125gr will give you complete pass throught. But if thats what you want to shoot have at it.
Posted By: eyeguy Re: Heaviest point? - 01/25/12
The heavy points will as you say quiet the bow and increase energy transfer. If you go much heavier I would start to worry the the arrow spine may be to weak for that much front weight. Hate to see a carbon shaft sticking out of your forearm after it gave way. Probably woldnt happen just something to consider.
Posted By: Lawdwaz Re: Heaviest point? - 01/25/12
142 grains via a 125 grain Wensel Woodsman and 17 grain insert adapter. All screwed into a Easton ACC 3-60.

Only killed a couple deer with it before going with a 100 grain Slik Trick.
Posted By: Biathlonman Re: Heaviest point? - 01/26/12
Wouldn't worry about it if its shooting well. I'm shooting 245gr. Point weight out of a trad bow!
Posted By: jasonlemire31 Re: Heaviest point? - 01/26/12
I like heavier broad heads with a little extra weight,Even with a powerful new bow. Penetration is so much better with extra arrow weight.Most shots are close with a bow anyways!!!!
Posted By: rost495 Re: Heaviest point? - 01/26/12
The guys that are old enough to remember and shoot heavier heads realize there is magic with weight vs penetration.

Its not always needed though.

I won't shoot a head under 125 grains. I shoot heads up to 200(heavy snuffers). All on carbon shafts at times.

No issues if its all set up and balanced right.

Way too much out there about light and fast and I'm still not convinced in a pinch that light and fast is the ticket. Regardless of what numbers say, real life when we shot 85 and 100 grain heads a few times, you just simply did not get the penetration like a heavier setup.

of course some folks just have to have the ability to shoot 50-60 yards and I totally understand that, I wont' due to animal movement, but thats a personal thing.

Of course we could hit 50-60 yard targets grapefruit sized all day long in the 70s/80s just ifne with 180 fps AL shafts and 145 grain heads... you just couldn't miss the range guess by more than a yard or two....
Posted By: MontanaCreekHunter Re: Heaviest point? - 01/26/12
Its all about a balance. But loading up an arrow with weight really isn't needed to get a complete pass thru with todays bows and broadheads. I am not into speed but I will say that 100gr RazorTrick will give complete pass thru on deer and elk with my bow/arrow/broadhead set-up I'll keep the little extra speed and pass on adding un-needed weight to my arrows. Even with my Long bow and A/C/C's with 100gr RazorTricks gets me pass thru's.

Now if I was planning on hunting dangerous game like Cape Buffalo then yeah I would add weight for better penatration.
Posted By: Lawdwaz Re: Heaviest point? - 01/26/12
Arrow placement is what matters. The guys looking for penetration are the ones that KNOW that a perfect broadside lung shot doesn't always happen. Quartering to or away happens, animals take a step, hit an unseen branch etc.

Plenty of things can effect that perfect broadside shot and the guy shooting some weight in his shaft/broadhead combo has an advantage in the penetration department.
Posted By: fyshbum Re: Heaviest point? - 01/26/12
At one point in time I was shooting full sized Snuffers @210 grains out of an 80# draw XI bow. I do not recall the aluminum shaft size, other than small telephone poles. The set up shot pretty well for the time. I never had an issue blowing right through deer from any angle with that setup.

Mostly stuck to 125-150 grain heads off of the compound in the past. Especially Muzzy's and Thunderheads.

Current setup is either tube weighted carbons with 100 grain Hell razors or 100 grain Muzzy's, or 2413's with 125 grain Woodsmans.
Posted By: MontanaCreekHunter Re: Heaviest point? - 01/26/12
Originally Posted by Lawdwaz
Arrow placement is what matters. The guys looking for penetration are the ones that KNOW that a perfect broadside lung shot doesn't always happen. Quartering to or away happens, animals take a step, hit an unseen branch etc.

Plenty of things can effect that perfect broadside shot and the guy shooting some weight in his shaft/broadhead combo has an advantage in the penetration department.


Shot placement always matters weather it be bow, gun, spear, knife, you name it. I have shot 1 deer with a perfect broadside out of well over 100. If my arrow will go thru an Elk from behind the last rib out just front of the shoulder it will blow thru any deer. So your arguement really doesn't hold much water.

The real problem is your shooting alert deer in very questionable shot windows if what you wrote is to be true. So it isn't an equipment or weight problem its your shot selection that is the problem.
Posted By: MontanaCreekHunter Re: Heaviest point? - 01/26/12
I will also add that Pass Thru's are overrated. Once the broadhead is out of the animal it no long does any cutting or damage. If my shot is off and the arrow stays in the animal it is going to continue to cut and do damage. Which just might shorten the distance the animal will go and the greater chance of recovery. Not so once the arrow is out of the animal.
Posted By: jasonlemire31 Re: Heaviest point? - 01/26/12
I don't think anyone was arguing!!I think everyone one has made good points!!
Posted By: jasonlemire31 Re: Heaviest point? - 01/26/12
I had a 100gr. wasp stop dead in a nice buck,with a shoulder shot.I found the deer 200yards,it still bled out.But, I wish, I had my full metal jacket 300 arrows back them.It would have clobbered him at 20yard. Typically a good rib shot on deer a 100gr tip will blow right threw deer!!
Posted By: rost495 Re: Heaviest point? - 01/26/12
I simply won't trust the light setups due to things like jason saw. I"ve seen them too.

The thing that works 100% of the time or as close to it as you can get, will be cut on contact and heavy.

The rest will fail at some point generally and I prefer to be as capable as I can when the time arrives.

For those that say a fast light head will always blow through.... lets just say my wifes bow was a bit over 200 fps, cut on contact light head. One one hog it went in, but the head never came out the other side. I"ve shot same setup but heavier heads and have never seen my bheads fail to exit.

As to the comments of exit isn't always desired, thats runing the same route of making sure the bullet blows up inside the deer and doesn't waste engeryg.... sooner or later that will bite you back. Some are oconnors, some are keiths. I know which camp has given me the best results.
Posted By: Lawdwaz Re: Heaviest point? - 01/27/12
Originally Posted by MontanaCreekHunter
Originally Posted by Lawdwaz
Arrow placement is what matters. The guys looking for penetration are the ones that KNOW that a perfect broadside lung shot doesn't always happen. Quartering to or away happens, animals take a step, hit an unseen branch etc.

Plenty of things can effect that perfect broadside shot and the guy shooting some weight in his shaft/broadhead combo has an advantage in the penetration department.


Shot placement always matters weather it be bow, gun, spear, knife, you name it. I have shot 1 deer with a perfect broadside out of well over 100. If my arrow will go thru an Elk from behind the last rib out just front of the shoulder it will blow thru any deer. So your arguement really doesn't hold much water.

The real problem is your shooting alert deer in very questionable shot windows if what you wrote is to be true. So it isn't an equipment or weight problem its your shot selection that is the problem.


WTF are you talking about? Did I mention my shooting or wounding of animals? I'm talking about the reason many people shoot heavy arrows/broadheads.

You've killed 100 animals with the bow and only one with a perfect broadside hit? Your going to critique my shooting?

Tell us more why one hole is better than two...............







Posted By: nclonghunter Re: Heaviest point? - 01/27/12
It is interesting to see the passion that folks have for their personal shooting methods. I have bow hunted for many years and have seen pass through shots with light arrows and heavy arrows. I have also seen arrows stop inches into the animal, most likely due to shot angles striking the bone or the arrow leaning at impact. I don't know all the reasons, but I know not "always" will they shoot and hit exactly like you want. I have, in the last few years started elk hunting and know the body of an elk is twice or three times the width of deer. Therefore, penetration is the absolute focus on good shot placement. No doubt in my mind that a heavy point will have better penetration. Maybe not needed for whitetails, but why chance it on a trophy elk. I was really curious how heavy of a point can be shot from a compound with carbon arrows, or at least what you guys/gals have used. Here is an interesting link showing penetration with primitive equipment on whitetails...enjoy and thanks

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LsqrlaIef2o&feature=channel_video_title
Posted By: rost495 Re: Heaviest point? - 01/27/12
Really want to fire up the discussion....

I"ll never shoot any POS mechanical ever again no matter how many strides they've made to perfect the iffy POS heads.
Posted By: Lawdwaz Re: Heaviest point? - 01/27/12
Originally Posted by rost495
Really want to fire up the discussion....

I"ll never shoot any POS mechanical ever again no matter how many strides they've made to perfect the iffy POS heads.


WHAT....... You pouring gas on the fire? <grin>


The marketing geniuses have really roped in the masses with them!

I've never shot a mechanical and never will.
Posted By: MontanaCreekHunter Re: Heaviest point? - 01/27/12
You can't read to well there lawdwaz, I didn't say 1 out of 100 perfect broadside hit. I said I have only had one deer give me a broadside shot. All have been quarting away to one degree or another. I try to position my stand for a slight quartering away shot. Reason number one is that way they are not looking in my direction (usually, hopefully most of the time). Reason number two is because out of the 100 or so deer taken with a bow, I would say that 90% turn and take-off for where they came from. So I have a pretty damn good idea where they will be found. I also don't shoot alert deer as I know they are more then likely to jump the string.
Posted By: Lawdwaz Re: Heaviest point? - 01/27/12
Originally Posted by MontanaCreekHunter
You can't read to well there lawdwaz, I didn't say 1 out of 100 perfect broadside hit. I said I have only had one deer give me a broadside shot. All have been quarting away to one degree or another. I try to position my stand for a slight quartering away shot. Reason number one is that way they are not looking in my direction (usually, hopefully most of the time). Reason number two is because out of the 100 or so deer taken with a bow, I would say that 90% turn and take-off for where they came from. So I have a pretty damn good idea where they will be found. I also don't shoot alert deer as I know they are more then likely to jump the string.


You seem to confuse yourself, easily.

I understand what you said.

Quote "I have shot 1 deer with a perfect broadside out of well over 100"

So you killed 99+ (well over 100) deer with a quartering away shot? (Your not shooting quartering on, are you?) That's awfully good.

How in the hell do you get the deer to follow your script?

And you know where they will die, buy your stand placement?

NOW I'm scratching my head............................

Posted By: MontanaCreekHunter Re: Heaviest point? - 01/27/12
No confusion that means (I will spell it out for you) That the deer was pretty much perfectly squared up 90 degrees.

I don't get the deer to follow my script, I follow theirs. Sorry you don't/can't grasp that.

I know where they are coming from and going to. Hint its called good scouting.

Yes I have a fairly good idea where they are heading after they have been hit. No I can't perdict where they will fall but I can say with confindence where they are heading. Hint its called good scouting.

Stop scratching and buy some shampoo for your condition.
Posted By: LostArra Re: Heaviest point? - 01/27/12
>>I will also add that Pass Thru's are overrated. Once the broadhead is out of the animal it no long does any cutting or damage.<<

Counterpoints to consider:

1. no mammalian thorax functions properly with holes in it. it functions even more poorly with multiple holes in it.

2. more holes equals more opportunity for blood on the ground

3. this is more subjective but my hunting buddies and I have found that an animal with an arrow hanging out of it's side will run further after the shot simply due to fear/adrenalin from the arrow slapping around like a riding crop.

I have seen animals after a pass thru shot simply take a step or two and just look around and drop dead (I've got a very quiet longbow). I have not seen this happen if the arrow is hanging out of its side

4. a pass thru arrow gives valuable info on the shot and how to proceed in trailing the animal

I'll take a pass thru every time.
Posted By: rost495 Re: Heaviest point? - 01/27/12
Yep.
Posted By: fishybobtrout Re: Heaviest point? - 01/27/12
I have bowhunted for many years (compounds only) and shot as much as 80 lbs draw weight when hunting and shooting 3D archery tournaments in the past. I don't think we thought as much about arrow speed until the 3D tournaments grew in attendance and bow companies found out that they could sell more bows if they made them faster. I'm in my 40's now and because of shoulder problems have been hunting with a 62 lb. bow for the last 4 years. At one point I had to drop down to 55lbs in order to draw my bow without pain.

I was worried about arrow penetration on my setup and also was trying to help outfit my friends wife with a bow she could hunt with. She can only draw 40 lbs. A quick study of traditional archery showed me that low poundage with heavy for poundage arrows, 10 grains per/lb of draw weight or more still produce adequate penetration. In Alabama, whitetails seem to be more high strung than the ones on the tv hunting shows and 20-25 yards is about as far as I'm comfortable shooting at a live animal where I hunt, so speed is not a big factor. I don't shoot that heavy an arrow but I do shoot a heavy carbon arrow more on the 8.5 grains per/lb side and haven't had any problems with pass throughs.

Adding a heavier head/insert will affect the front of center and cause spine changes in the arrow. Which makes a difference depending what rest and release style you choose. A finger shooter, or a release shooter using a shoot around rest will have more problems with changes in spine than a release shooter using a drop away or shoot through rest. But an overall heavier arrow will make the bow more quiet and are usually more forgiving to shoot in my experience.

The drop away rests, while adding another moving part, have been far and away the most accurate rest I have ever used, especially with broadheads. I just wish I would have tried one when I was shooting tournaments.

I don't chronograph my arrows because I don't want to know how fast they are going, or how slow.( If I knew, I'd probably be tempted to up my poundage for a few more fps, that is not needed where I hunt.)

I have started using rage expandables as they shoot exactly like my field points without having to do any special tuning to my bow. Something I have never been able to do with traditional/fixed blade heads, and have not had any penetration issues on whitetails shot through the ribs. Shoot one in the shoulder and you just take your chances with any of them. They would not be my first choice for elk sized critters, probably go back to a Magnus cut on contact for that.

I definitely agree with #3 from LostArra above, and it has been my observation as well.

Bob.

Posted By: fyshbum Re: Heaviest point? - 01/30/12
as with Roost, LostArra and others, Put me in the two holes crowd. Try hunting the low country in the SE or the thicker timbered areas with poor tracking conditions where you cannot see past 5-6 feet infront of you, especially at night. Not all of us hunt in areas where a deer can lay overnight either from varmits or temperature concerns.
Two holes, especially if you hunt from a treestand can be very important. A high hit angling down from a treestand that fails to pass through can be a very hard tracking job particularly in the conditions stated above. Anyone who says different has not tried it very often.
The best way to get two holes, besides shot selection, is the right well sharpened broadhead, enough weight in the shaft, and enough poundage in the bow to propel the arrow at enough velocity to exit. Change any of these variables and the results will suffer.

Mechanicals can be great broadheads in the right conditions. The problem is they are not the best choice for everyone, as they are advertized to be. The other problem is people watch super hunter X on such and such show and blindly follow "the experts" advice with out understanding their individual needs to make their own setup work at the peak of it's harvesting potential. I have used them to take several animals and have enough reservations to not try them again.

I hunted in an archery only club for six years in South Carolina where we would routinely take 100+ deer per year by 33-35 hunters in camp. The setups would run the gamet from the most high tech modern setups to selfbows and flint heads. Trailing deer after dark in standing water swamps will make you appreciate an efficient killing set up.

The most successful of us used heavier than average shafts with well designed fixed blade broadheads, either Cut on Contact, or good penetrating heads like Muzzy's or Thunderheads. This was at the rise of the Punchcutter mechanicals and light weight carbon shaft combinations that flew great but came up short on all but the best of shot placements. There were a lot of deer lost that year from poor penetration and broadhead failures.

Time and Time again, penetration, well made scary sharp broadheads, medium to heavy shafts per poundage, and shot placement are the keys to bowhunting success. If you take a shortcut on any of the four variables your success rate will suffer as your loss of game numbers increase. These are the basic fundamentals of a good bowhunter. The rest is just the meaningless background noise of mental masturbation on the part of the feeble minded, uninformed, unexperienced, or misguided masses.



Posted By: rost495 Re: Heaviest point? - 01/30/12
Lots of comments here I agree with. BTDT on a lot of things, coming back to the old it works almost all the time, still seems like the best ticket at this point.

Of course I"m not a fan of one hole with bullets either that there is a huge following of.

I still sit in the worst case scenario fan club, even if its a perfect shot as you release, what if the animal moves?? I want the ability to run it through stem to stern and break any bones in the way if at all possible, or at least as close to that possibilty as I can get...

Jeff
Posted By: Lawdwaz Re: Heaviest point? - 01/30/12
Originally Posted by rost495
Lots of comments here I agree with. BTDT on a lot of things, coming back to the old it works almost all the time, still seems like the best ticket at this point.

Of course I"m not a fan of one hole with bullets either that there is a huge following of.

I still sit in the worst case scenario fan club, even if its a perfect shot as you release, what if the animal moves?? I want the ability to run it through stem to stern and break any bones in the way if at all possible, or at least as close to that possibilty as I can get...

Jeff


I agree with you and was trying to make that point last week. You never know when a deer or any animal is going to move, where they will come from, hit a little twig, pull a shot, buck fever etc. The weight in your shaft/broadhead CAN give you a penetration advantage and hopefully, get you an exit hole to aid in blood trailing. For some, YMMV.
Posted By: rost495 Re: Heaviest point? - 01/30/12
I dunno that YMMV in that situation, as much as folks are stubborn, believe all the newest hype, and tend not to pay attention to what has worked for decades. They eventually all give up, don't give a flip or learn the hard way unfortunately.

Its much my take on magnumitis... my BIL has it bad, I guess I do too, to a point... but if going mag you really want a bigger heavier bullet than you want in say your 06.... but the BIL goes the other way.... and its bit him a time or two.

I just tend to try to have as much respect for the animal as I can.

That does NOT mean I haven't screwed the pooch now and then.
Posted By: slumlord Re: Heaviest point? - 01/31/12
I only use 100 gr magnum Slick Trick fixed blades.

Solingen steel.

Posted By: mikimack Re: Heaviest point? - 02/28/12
# Carbon Market News Online
# Carbon Market Daily
# Carbon Market Europe (Also available as a single product)
# CDM & JI Monitor (Also available as a single product)
# Online price data
# CITL Search
Posted By: CRS Re: Heaviest point? - 02/29/12
I used 300gr points when I was doing some bow efficiency testing. Shot just fine.

I was measuring KE and momentum as arrow weight incresed. I started at 275gr and went up to 1300gr. Pretty interesting, albeit, predicable results. As I increased arrow weight in compounds, recurves and longbows, KE and momentum increased.

As I plotted KE and momentum vs arrow weight, there was a noticable increase right around 400gr of total arrow weight.

Posted By: nclonghunter Re: Heaviest point? - 02/29/12
CRS, was there a point where it appeared to be too much weight or just more than what is needed?
What did you shoot into for a target?

This is an interesting video for primitive arrows..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LsqrlaIef2o
Posted By: CRS Re: Heaviest point? - 03/03/12
I just shot the arrows into a bag target.

I did the study because the state was implementing new archery regulations. Minimum arrow weight was a very contentious point. So I thought I would see if there was a common weight where compounds, recurves and longbows became most efficient.

What I found was that as arrow weight increased, so did KE/momentum. There was no limit. When I graphed arrow weight vs KE or momentum all bows shows a bigger increase once the weight hit 375-400gr. So I proposed 400gr hoping to get at least 375gr. They went with 275gr I believe as that was the lower limit of arrow technology at that time.

I did not shoot for distance, and think that the extreme heavy arrows would be limited by trajectory.














© 24hourcampfire