A 65# arrow is a 65# arrow shot through any bow with or w/o wheels will be fine.
I hate to be blunt, but that is just plain wrong. I've done the math.
The arrow does not care what the draw weight of the bow is, it only cares about its own acceleration.
A compound bow can take a 60 lb draw and turn that into more arrow speed than a 60 lb trad bow over the same draw length due its mechanical superiority and greater efficiency. This means the arrow has a significantly larger acceleration in a compound than it does in a trad bow. And since f=ma, the force applied to that arrow is also increased by the same factor even though the draw weights are the same.
An arrow that has been shot hundreds of times through your 60lb trad bow, may very well fracture when shot from your 60lb compound.
Are we using the new math or the old math to figure this out ? !!
Half eye uses 5/16 dowel shafts I don't , he answered the original question !
Too many pieces to this puzzle to explain how all the rest of these gimmicks work or don't , so like Pappy said use good arrows that are stiff enough to get the job done and keep a good eye on them ! All is good
Use junk, or not pay attention and all is not so good !
If we are satisfied with the fun we are having then we ain't out chasing speed demons and ghost !
I am having fun so don't knock my way with modern is better , cause it don't get any better than this !
I am sorry if that I helped high jack this thread ,but it is really hard for me to sit by and read misleading info passed on as truth ! I have wasted enough time and energy chasing pipe dreams
Have fun
Guy
I never said modern is better. I love my trad bows more than I could ever love a compound. But the
fact is that modern bows are faster, and not just a little faster, a lot faster. This
needs to be taken into account if you are going to shoot wooden arrows through it because it directly affects the force that the arrow sees. Most wooden arrows are intended for and spined for use with trad bows. This is not enough to ensure they are strong enough to withstand the compound speeds.
And I am using basic math here. Its just the kinematic equations of distance, time, speed, and acceleration and newton's law, f=ma. This is tried and true stuff, I'm not pulling this out of my ass. I can show you my work if you want.
If you are going to shoot wooden arrows from a compound bow, they need to be stiffer than arrows used for a similar weight trad bow.
Sorry if I hijacked the thread a bit. I just can't let a safety issue like that go unrecognized. I just made the compound reference in passing to warn him that while those shafts he has are fine for just about any trad bow, they may not be good enough for a compound. And then a few people disagreed with my statement, so I thought i should set the record straight.