Comparing a heavy target arrow to a light 3D arrow
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- Опубліковано 30 жов 2023
- I discuss the Victory VXT target arrow and the Victory 3DHV super fast arrow for field and 3D archery. I discuss the sight settings for both arrows how this can affect your judging of distance and angles.
I discuss shooting both arrows in the wind and how much wind drift occured on both arrows.
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I literally put these two arrows in my quiver this morning to experiment with. Thanks for all you do
Most .166 arrows will have less than 10% reduction in wind drift compared to similar weight .203 arrows just based on the difference in frontal area and surface area.
I prefer skinny .166 arrows.
Most bows have a minimum arrow weight, which you should be aware of as it can damage your bow
because if the arrow is too light the bow will have the extra power going through the bow .
Like a smaller version of dry fire
Got the 3DHV, shooting 298 grains at 50 , good for 3D archery :) Only downside is that they are fragile.
I decided to go with something middle of the road flying at 280 fps.
My Black Eagle Rampage (.204) come in at 410 grain with a total of 150 grain up front. I found it does well in any discipline that I shoot. (3D, outdoor and field).
X23 for indoors being the exception.
· THANK YOU
Here in the States the ASA tournament rules have 290 fps +3% for the fastest arrow speed in the unknown yardage classes. Other classes have 280 fps+3%. This is to level the playing field so someone isn’t shooting 350 fps? in the unknown classes. Arrow speed doesn’t matter so much in the known classes. I understand Australian ABA 3-d is all unknown? so speed is important there.
So where do clout arrows fit into the arrow selection. We don't do a lot of clout here, though researching it has brought me down a few google rabbit holes. Found Suggestions: Heavier with short flights.
The only thing I dislike about Victory is their awful packaging of accessories for arrows. You get a pack of pin nock adapters and you won't know which arrows they're for or which spine because they don't have that information there. I wish they make it more user-friendly.
3DHV are not necessarily weaker due to thinner wall. I believe they use a stronger grade of carbon to achieve that spine at that weight. Maybe they dont? So the strength will also be up.
The larger diameter has a huge influence on spine. Carbon can be formulated to have either high strength or high modulus (stiffness). Basically the stronger carbon is springy while the weaker carbon is very stiff. If the manufacturer chooses to use high modulus carbon they could create a very light arrow with a thin wall thickness which is likely what the 3D arrow is
@user-tw9io9nz2m True. But the external diameter between them is not much different as the walls are so thin. But your right about the stiffness/ strength