Shooters Forum

Contribute to Trad Gang
Become a Trad Gang Sponsor



more forgiving, LB, or recurve?

Started by Ybuck, October 21, 2009, 10:23:00 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Ybuck

I heard Byron Fergeson once say that he thinks  longbows are more forgiving to shoot than recurves.
Because the limbs on LB are thicker, and stiffer, therefore more "stable".
What are your thoughts?
Thanks.
Steve.

sdpeb1

I've shot both and I can shoot a longbow better, but I think it's individual. How's Minn? I'll be there on the 2nd!! -Steve

Ybuck

QuoteOriginally posted by sdpeb1:
I've shot both and I can shoot a longbow better, but I think it's individual. How's Minn? I'll be there on the 2nd!! -Steve
Been real wet here.
The deer are starting to move alot this past week.
The 2nd should be perfect timing for you.
thanks for the response.
Steve.

Jeremy

Whichever bow has your hand positioned farther forward relative to the tips of the unbraced bow will be more forgiving of shooter errors.

For example, my longbow with over 3" of net reflex is a whole lot touchier to shoot than my recurves where there's only 3/4" of net reflex, but I have to be just as careful with my form and follow through when shooting my recurves with 3+"
of net reflex.

The tips of a bow want to return to their unbraced profile after the shot, though the string prevents them from doing it.  As you increase the net reflex you generally increase performance but at the cost of "stability" or "forgivability."

The extremes of this are a longbow that follows the string quite a bit - which you'll find almost complete agreement as being a sweet and stable bow to shoot (if a dog in the speed department) - and a true horsebow where the tips are so highly reflexed they touch or overlap in the unbraced bow - which is a speed demon but so touchy of form and follow-through you don't see many using them for target archery.
>>>-TGMM Family Of The Bow-->
CT CE/FS Chief Instructor
"Death is not the greatest loss in life.  The greatest loss is what dies inside us while we live." - Norman Cousins

trashwood

weeeellll.  3ard leg of IBO worlds

LB 353
TRD 362
RU 383

hmmm longbow does not seem more forgiving

rusty

gordie

Jim Ploen said:
"Forgiveness is in the arrow,not the bow."
anybody remember him?

trashwood

what Zeta said below sums it up better than I can  :)

rusty

zetabow

Gordie I met Jim at NAFAC05, he gave me a signed belt buckle made from 21st century wood, very cool guy.


I'm with trashwood, the tourney scores prove different, maybe the odd good Longbow shooter can match or even sometimes outshoot the Recurve but 98% of the time Recurve wins.

Gordie in my countries tourney rules we have a Trad Recurve division with wood arrows and 3 Longbow Archers have outshot Recurves at out National champs 7 out of the last 10 years BUT when you look at the scores it's only the top Longbow shooter then look on the list it's ALL Recurve down to about 10th place.

gordie

hello zeta,
my 21st century"longbow", from jim & buddy, came w/ a belt buckle, looks like they made it from the wood they cut from the sight window.
that was 12 yrs. ago,boy time flies.

zetabow

Gordie did he sign it for you?

It was a nice gesture from him as I only spoke with him 15min at the tourney.

Mark P

A very timely topic for me.  I'm trying to decide between a Martin Savannah Longbow or a Martin Hatfield Take-down recurve.  Any help would be greatly appreciated.  I'm a beginner when it comes to traditional archery.

zetabow

Mark think of it this way

A Longbow is more forgiving of poor shooting form, if you have poor shooting form and you shot Longbow and Recurve side by side the Longbow will give you better results than the Recurve BUT if your shooting form is solid you will likely shoot the Recurve better.

Don Stokes

The tips of a longbow limb are normally much stiffer than the tips on a recurve limb, which makes the longbow more stable when your form is off a bit. Byron is right. For target shooting when you can achieve perfect form, it doesn't really matter. It does matter for a hunter, when field conditions prevent perfect form.
Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.- Ben Franklin

Ragnarok Forge

Trad bows and compounds work the same on this point.  A longer bow tends to be more forgiving than a short one.  Longbows are normally longer and thus more forgiving of error forms. Add in the thicker and anrrower limbs and it adds up.

I would have to say that trying to use longbows versus recurves winners as a measure of more accurate is a tough one to prove.  How many people are shooting recurves in those shoots versus how many are shooting recurves.  If 75% are shooting recurves, your gong the see most of the winners shooting recurves by default.  I suspect the recurves are shot more dur to the increased arrow speeds you can get at lower draw weights.
Clay Walker
Skill is not born into anyone.  It is earned thru hard work and perseverance.

shakeyslim

better to do your part and not rely on the bow to "forgive" form errors  :archer:
a hippie taught me to hunt
i left 1971 way back in 1971

Rob Fin

For me, a recurve feels more forgiving. I think this is because the typical recurve grip allows more consistent hand placement than many longbow grips (not all) do. I think being cut past center helps too. I find I am able to more quickly and accurately get "on target" with a recurve, especially in hunting situations. Having said that, I sure wish the opposite was true for me. I like longbows better!

Doug Treat

For me, I seem to shoot recurves better.  It seems that recurves are more forgiving when I have bad form.

cbCrow

I have read a great deal thru the years about this subject and agree with those that say a longbow is more forging, however I shoot both and feel that Iam better with a recurve and seem to be more accurate with it. Confidence I think is a big part of this.

LongStick64

The bow that works with you is the one. Personally my Dale Dye is the most forgiving bow I have, but I love to shoot my Morrison Cheyenne more. So I guess go with what makes you happy, you'll shoot more, hit more, and smile more.

On a serious note I do think a smartly designed recurve is more stable.
Primitive Bowhunting.....the experience of a lifetime

dick sable

Didn't Howard Hill once suggest that he was not a good enough archer to shoot recurve bows?

Contact Us | Trad Gang.com © | User Agreement

Copyright 2003 thru 2025 ~ Trad Gang.com ©