Various draw lenghts for various bows.?

Started by Wolftrail, August 20, 2017, 02:32:00 PM

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Wolftrail

If your draw length is 28" why build a wood bow that is tillered to 26" when your brain and physical body pulls 28" Naturally.....?

Case in point the bow is tillered to 26" you pull it beyond that and it snaps.......!  
  :banghead:

Mo_coon-catcher

Only reason for me, if the bow is for me. Is that that's all the wood the stave had to work with and I wanted to make that piece shoot. Then I would make a string draw stop to keep me from pulling too far. That's about the only reason for me. But then it would probably be passed on to someone that can make use of it.

Kyle

Bvas

No argument here.
Seems like logical thinking to me.

But I'm guessing this post is more about venting frustration On a more personal note.
Some hunt to survive; some survive to hunt

Pat B

You should tiller a bow to your draw length and maybe an inch or so more just for insurance. Building a bow with a 26" draw for a 28" draw is asking for a broken or badly bent bow.
Make the most of all that comes and the least of all that goes!
TGMM Family of the Bow

Mad Max

If you want a short bow (Osage), for hunting in a tree or blind, you could make it short.
50@24 kills as good as 50@28

2 cents
I would rather fail at something above my means, than to succeed at something  beneath my means  
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Wolftrail

QuoteOriginally posted by Bvas:
No argument here.
Seems like logical thinking to me.

But I'm guessing this post is more about venting frustration On a more personal note.
I should of titled the topic differently.    :(  

Nope no venting here.  All good answers, sums it up for me.

==================================
Is a string draw stop legal in say 3-D shoots and such..?  I may of heard about that method before, sure makes sense coon catcher.

Wolftrail


KenH

I build 'short draw' bows because I don't always shoot in that classic standing pose where I can get my personal 26" draw.  If I build a bow for brush hunting, or sit hunting, I do not use my normal 27" "standing draw", I use a "draw to bow shoulder" or "draw to center chest" technique, with the bow almost completely horizontal.

It's an urban myth that an archer "must" draw to the, chin, ear, etc, brought to you my those English longbowmen.  Horse archers and many other traditional shooters did not draw that far.
Living Aboard the s/v ManCave

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