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pounds per inch

Started by blacktailchaser, August 10, 2022, 01:23:04 PM

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blacktailchaser

the main question is how many pound per inch does fiberglass gain or lose in draw.....now i know this is differant from bowyer to bowyer...my bear grizzly is 55 @28...but i draw 26"...i just dont know if its 2# or 3# an inch...thanks

TIM B

Not sure but you could pull it 26 with a fish scale and see.
Tim B

Whiteoak63

Assuming the brace height is around 8" and it really is 55# at 28", it should be around 2.75# per inch.

56" Black Widow PCH-X 49# @ 27
58" Toelke Whistler 46# @ 27
Pearson Hunter 45# @ 28
1974 Bear Grizzly 46#@ 28
1969 Bear Kodiak Magnum 40# @ 28
Hunting in Gods Country.

McDave

Most commonly it's between 2-3 lbs/inch, but it varies along the force draw curve for each bow. For a 55# bow at full draw that is not stacking, my guess would be 3#/inch.
TGMM Family of the Bow

Technology....the knack of arranging the world so that we don't have to experience it.

Appalachian Hillbilly

My guess is around 3 as well. Heavier poundage bows build faster. My 50 kb is about 2.75, my 40 is less.

blacktailchaser

whiteoak63 brace is 8 1/4....McDave thanks i am think its 3'' thanks guys






woodchucker

"General rule of thumb" is about 2 1/2# per inch.....

However...  My experience has been, (with my old Bear recurves)
That over 28" is closer to 3# and under 28" is closer to 2# per inch. OMMV
I only shoot WOOD arrows... My kid makes them, fast as I can break them!

There is a fine line between Hunting, & Sitting there looking Stupid...

May The Great Spirit Guide Your Arrows..... Happy Hunting!!!

stevem

Assuming a linear draw curve try this-  55# / (28" - 8.25") = 2.8# per inch
"What was big was not the fish, but the chance.  What was full was not the creel, but the memory" - Aldo Leopold   "Good judgement comes from experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgement"- Will Rogers

mnbwhtr

Back in the day I shot a 32" draw I checked All of bows and they usually went up from 60# to 75# over those 4 inches. They were Bear T/D's and a Carrolls T/D but with the Carrolls you felt no stacking at all.

Kirkll

Quote from: blacktailchaser on August 10, 2022, 01:23:04 PM
the main question is how many pound per inch does fiberglass gain or lose in draw.....now i know this is differant from bowyer to bowyer...my bear grizzly is 55 @28...but i draw 26"...i just dont know if its 2# or 3# an inch...thanks

Draw force curves are measured in pounds per inch and change a lot from one limb design to the next. It's not the glass that changes the PPI throughout the draw cycle, but the shape of the limb, and where the limb is bending.

You can have one limb design that has higher preload and the PPI in the first several inches will be 5-6 PPI, then drop clear down to 1.6 PPI mid draw, then slowly gets higher at the tail end of the draw.  This let off feeling makes for a smooth draw. Typical recurve designs do this as well as some hybrid long bows.

Other designs have lower preload, and a lot less PPI in the first few inches and a steady increase as the draw gets longer. Such as a D shaped long bow.

I would say your 55 @ 28" grizzly will be very close to 50# @ 26". it's probably about 2.5 to 2.75 PPI between 26-28". After 28" it will climb up to 3 PPI pretty quickly to 30" draw, and probably go higher between 30-31".      Kirk
Big Foot Bows
Traditional Archery
bigfootbows@gmail.com
http://bigfootbows.com/b/bows/

Russell Southerland

I did not read any post, it depends on the Bowyer's design and the draw force curve there is no such thing as a standard.

blacktailbob

What Tim B said. end of story.
islandgraphics@bellsouth.net

Islandgraphicsfl.com

TIM B

Lol I've been watching this.  Almost strung up my 55# griz to test but that's not the answer either....every bow is different
Tim B

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