HuntingNet.com Forums

HuntingNet.com Forums (https://www.huntingnet.com/forum/)
-   Technical (https://www.huntingnet.com/forum/technical-20/)
-   -   Brace height question... (https://www.huntingnet.com/forum/technical/367447-brace-height-question.html)

Beard Buster 07-11-2012 04:13 PM

Brace height question...
 
I am hearing a ton of talk about brace height lately and it seems that newer bows are having shorter and shorter brace height. My question is on whether or not it makes much difference, and if so, what differences does it make? How do limbs play into the brace height with regard to their angle and what effect does it have on accuracy? If newer bows were becoming less accurate with shorter brace height, wouldn't they cease to exist? Basically, what is the trade-off?

The Rev 07-12-2012 04:45 AM

That's the reason why bows are getting faster each year. personally I wouldn't own a bow under 7" brace height, my competition bow has a 8 1/2 brace height.

BGfisher 07-12-2012 09:50 AM

I don't agree that brace heights are getting shorter. Generally most bows are hanging in around 7", which has been going on for many years. Sure, there are outright speed bows that have shorter braces. but these are just a few. There are lots of choices to be made with around 7".

The advantage to shorter? More speed, pure and simple.

Disadvantages? Usually a noiser bow. Wrist slap in many cases. Less forgivness in the bow because of the arrow being on the string longer for a given draw length.

That being said, a person with a shorter draw length can actually benefit from a shorter brace height. He can get more speed without having the arrow on the string as someone with a longer draw.

I'm sure there are a few bows with brace heights around 8" or so, but nobody is really interested in them these days. This is a different generation that is interested in speed and not so interested in accuracy potential.

HDMontana 07-13-2012 09:03 AM

Yes shorter brace heights are for speed. The longer the arrow can stay on the string, the more energy is transferred from bow to the arrow thus generating a faster arrow. Now with that said, the disadvantage is that the longer the arrow is on the string, the more chance of hand torque, looking down range to quick and dropping bow hand or any other problems with shooting form can have an affect on the arrow before leaving the string.

CamoCop 07-13-2012 03:05 PM


Originally Posted by BGfisher (Post 3951207)
I don't agree that brace heights are getting shorter. Generally most bows are hanging in around 7", which has been going on for many years. Sure, there are outright speed bows that have shorter braces. but these are just a few. There are lots of choices to be made with around 7".

The advantage to shorter? More speed, pure and simple.

Disadvantages? Usually a noiser bow. Wrist slap in many cases. Less forgivness in the bow because of the arrow being on the string longer for a given draw length.

That being said, a person with a shorter draw length can actually benefit from a shorter brace height. He can get more speed without having the arrow on the string as someone with a longer draw.

I'm sure there are a few bows with brace heights around 8" or so, but nobody is really interested in them these days. This is a different generation that is interested in speed and not so interested in accuracy potential.


what he said

ijimmy 07-20-2012 03:42 AM

bgfisher has got it right , wrist/jacket sleeve slap is a major issue when hunting , with a coat on . as far as accuracy , if your form is spot on and you have a shorter draw length , 6 1/2 plus brace heights are not that bad .if you have longer draw and mismatched equipment , questionable form , short brace will drive you crazy with inconsistency to serious wrist slap


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 02:17 PM.


Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.