Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Bows => Topic started by: BrokenArrow on October 30, 2014, 02:45:50 pm
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Do recurved tips add enough poundage,speed and penetration to compensate for a lack of accuracy?
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If you dont put the arrow in the rigth place its not the extra power that will save the day...
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im no hunter but i know if your accuracy sucks you shouldnt be hunting at all. if you cant hit vital organs you're just torturing whatever you shoot.
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To clarify, not for hunting but strictly performance.
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Three word's, PRACTICE, PRACTICE, PRACTICE.
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Huh?
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Where did you hear that recurves are inaccurate? I've never known that to be the case.
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He wants to know if recurves will improve his accuracy
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Bows are not accurate or inaccurate! The archers is where the accuracy comes from.
A faster bow shoots an arrow with a flatter trajectory but if you know the trajectory of your arrows it doesn't matter if your bow is a recurve, a R/D style bow or a straight limb bow. You can still be accurate. Accuracy comes from using proper form, practice, consistency, practice, practice and concentration.
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Bows are not accurate or inaccurate! The archers is where the accuracy comes from.
A faster bow shoots an arrow with a flatter trajectory but if you know the trajectory of your arrows it doesn't matter if your bow is a recurve, a R/D style bow or a straight limb bow. You can still be accurate. Accuracy comes from using proper form, practice, consistency, practice, practice and concentration.
Exactly. I would add that tuning the right arras to the bow is crucial for consistency. Although if you read most of the bows posted shoot "right where I look" which is not the case for myself ;)
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Recurves do hit harder. Accuracy is a completely different thing though, there is no such thing as hitting so hard that you hit accurately, you are talking apples and transformers.
SOM
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shorter bows, I have heard, are more difficult to be accurate with, and many traditional short bows (mongolian and turkish horn bows, for example) also have large recurved sections, but the recurve itself is not the issue with accuracy, but the lack of stability that comes from the low mass and length of the shorter bow. Someone correct me if I am wrong.
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Do you mean if you knock down the 3d target or blow through the outside edges will you be given a better score than the guys in the bull? No.
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I actually have hears some say that flat glassed recurves can be more inaccurate if you are inaccurate. like they twist at the tips easier and there for can have sporadic shooting. but yea, power does not compensate accuracy. and realistically you only goto penetrate very few inches to hit lung at times. also, its not all about speed I don't think. I mean in guns some will kill and others will kill right now. bows its all placement. tbh I actually enjoy longbows over recurve anyways. lol. maybe that makes me biased XD
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I am by no mean a very experienced archer but this is my take on accuracy from my 2 years of instictive shooting. I shoot a 43@26 flatbow.
First of all, you have to tune your arrows to yor bow. You won't be accurate unless the arrow have the right spine.
Second, work on you form (shooting stance).
Third, the most important for consistency (and most difficult...) is to have a good release. I use a primary and secondary anchor points. BUT, that all said, if you don't practice you can't get any better. No matter what boow you use.
Hope this helps....
Dor
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No no no, what you need is Del' "Accuracy enhancing powder" O:)
You rub it over the back of the bow limbs.
There is no truth in the rumour that it's the same stuff as my "anti chrysal" powder... obviously, 'cos you rub that on the belly. ::)
More seriously, you want a bow and arrow set up that gives smoothness and accuracy, and that's down to the individual and how they shoot. Of course you need enough hitting power, but that's seldom an issue unless you are after pachyderms!
Del
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What Pearl said HUh. ??? :-\
Pappy
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HI guys,
I have found that bows are like women in the following ways,
1- they both want to be... held gently, not grabbed or groped
2- they both want to be... made loved to, not have there string plucked ;)
if you follow those two rules you will greatly improve your accuracy. >:D >:D
happy bowyering
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It's not that recurves or flipped tipped bows are less accurate, but rather, the faster the bow shoots, the more "technically precise" your release needs to be.
I teach a LOT of people how to shoot bows, and most of them have never shot a bow before in their life, so I see a lot of sloppy releases. (Thankfully, we're just shooting bullseyes) When the archer has a simple flat bow in their hands, they inevitably have higher scores than when they are shooting a faster shooting, flipped tip bow.
Here's where I think the problem is... Their aim is exactly the same between the two bows, their anchor point is the same, but one thing that new archers consistently do inconsistently is their release.
Maybe someone can describe this better than me, because I'm just going by observation, but if the person's anchor point and aiming method are exactly the same between two bows - one being a simple flat bow, and the other being a flipped tip or recurve bow - the simple flat bow will be MUCH more forgiving of a sloppy release.
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I don't hunt since where I live bowhunting is illegal and there's much more humans than animals anyway. O:)
But doing a parcours or any shooting where distance varies greatly, I find it easier with a heavier bow. For a consistent distance, I hit better with a lighter one.
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Let keep tihis simple, I have a bow thats is flat and tillered and shot then I decide to put static tips on it. Will that make it more accurate or less?
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Let keep tihis simple, I have a bow thats is flat and tillered and shot then I decide to put static tips on it. Will that make it more accurate or less?
the bow is not accurate, the archer is. if you cant hit your target then its your fault not the bows.
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Yes, it is the archer that misses. But assuming good string alignment and all that, a recurved bow ought to shoot faster and so will also shoot with along a flatter path, making your drop in elevation a bit easier to account for as you have to account for less. So it should help.
SOM
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Hard to say because the are so many variables depending on the design.brace height,nock point and arrow spine play a larger part Imho.
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I think that some believe that longer bows are easier to become accurate with more quickly.
It is more important to be able to put the arrow where you need it than to blast it through the target.
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Accounting for drop only matters fo some people anyways. Because everyone shoots different its hard to get a set answer from any one. I shoot instinctively. My friend and president of the archery club shoot gap. I was out shooting with the one and he was watching me shoot (I was way out scoring him on the 3D course). So he asks me. Where did you aim at that one (a fifteen yard deer). I say at the kill. Next shot is a fourty yard black bear. Nailed it too. "Where did u aim on that one? " "right at the kill." He looks at me funny. "Do it again" so I do. Upon watching my shooting style he noticed that I draw and anchor. Then creep up wards till I release. I didnt even know I was doing it. And its something ive always done I guess and something he can not do at all. My point is two fold I guess. Whatever bow you use, use it. Get used to it. And it will all fall into place. Secondly, everyone does it different and will tell you different. You goto just find what worms for you. Sorry for the novel. Cheers bro.
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some recurves dont shoot faster than a straight stave bow,, just depends on the design,,
olympic bows are recurves and shoot accurately
longbows have been shooting accurately for a long time
a very short recurve shot from horse back at full gallop can be shot accurately at close range
really just depends,,,, not really one answer,,
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I think that some believe that longer bows are easier to become accurate with more quickly.
It is more important to be able to put the arrow where you need it than to blast it through the target.
anything else being equal, a longer bow is usually shooting better (unless it needlessly bends in the middle section). Reasons for making a bow short are different ones.
Recurves will certainly not make a bow more accurate. I'm quite sure of that. It will need tillering adjustments, too.