OLDFLYER said:
cingold
Quote;
"David Wilkins started a thread on another forum about about increasing arrow weights, KE and speed decrease with increasing arrow weight."
That is totally wrong. Take any given bow where the only thing that is changed is the weight of the arrow. The heavier the arrow, the MORE the KE and of course, the slower the speed.
Did some tests a few years back.
350 gr arrow - 299 FPS - 69.5 ft/lbs
394 gr arrow - 285 FPS - 71.1 ft/lbs
432 gr arrow - 275 FPS - 72.6 ft/lbs
484 gr arrow - 261 FPS - 73.3 ft/lbs
550 gr arrow - 249 FPS - 75.7 ft/lbs
752 gr arrow - 217 FPS - 78.6 ft/lbs
Quote;
"David Wilkins started a thread on another forum about about increasing arrow weights, KE and speed decrease with increasing arrow weight."
That is totally wrong. Take any given bow where the only thing that is changed is the weight of the arrow. The heavier the arrow, the MORE the KE and of course, the slower the speed.
Did some tests a few years back.
350 gr arrow - 299 FPS - 69.5 ft/lbs
394 gr arrow - 285 FPS - 71.1 ft/lbs
432 gr arrow - 275 FPS - 72.6 ft/lbs
484 gr arrow - 261 FPS - 73.3 ft/lbs
550 gr arrow - 249 FPS - 75.7 ft/lbs
752 gr arrow - 217 FPS - 78.6 ft/lbs
ok, with the data you provide I can tell you so far:
if you dry fire your crossbow, the string velocity will be 654fps. And your crossbow is transferring 81,59% of its stored energy to the arrow, assuming the string itself isn't eating up energy of course. Now, if you have a second crossbow shot with the same arrow weights, we can compare theoretical efficiency. I'm still busy including string, rail etc but ya, it is exceeding my current time and knowledge. there are some nicks in the formula of course, powerstroke, cam/wheel efficiency etc but one day.....
See, I want to compare a compound with a recurve xbow. Eliminating all the factors that swallow energy transfer, there should be a possibility to make some efficiency statements after all. I understand a recurve xbows velocity doesn't decrease the same than a compound when increasing arrow weight? I don't know, true or not? We will come close to a method now
Addendum: I've calculated expected speed with a known arrow weight, the mathematical value differs 1 footsecond from what you shot with the 484gr arrow... Nifty, you only lose 1fps in real life. Impressive
Edited by cingold, 19 June 2009 - 07:30 AM.
















