It seems the point I was trying to make is missed here, as it's not about dry fire speed per sé. It's that, IMO, a heavy arow shot at the same initial velocity will fly farther than a light arrow, because, unlike bow and arrow dimensions, air density (and thus drag) cannot be scaled up or down, it remains the same.
But it's close to the obvious, since we already know heavy flight bows shoot farther than light flight bows...
This said, can you explain, Steve, how you think larger bows and more energy storage will aid flight shooting?