Bow Poundage?


huntdux

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Guest adrenaline_junky

I would go along with everyone else 40 pounds would have to be the limit. Same with checking state regs. Don't want to tell you something and it not be lawfull. Good luck.

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A friend of mine took a doe with a 32# longbow so I would guessing that is near equivalent to a 24# compound. ;)

It's the broadhead that will determine the minimum weight as to the actual minimum.

That being said ..... state guidelines are the rule to follow and 40# is plenty....seen to many animals taken with 40# to say that it isn't.

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What is the least amount of poundage you would attempt to take a deer with? Asking because my wife would like to get into bow hunting, but if her draw weight would not be an ethical one I may get her a crossbow.

I shoot 40lbs and I'm a small framed woman. Later in the season I'll reach 45lbs. I take the increases slow because last year I almost messed up the rotator cuff in my shoulder. I can pull more than 40 right now but the ache in the shoulder lets me know to take it easy or I won't be shooting at all.

A larger framed woman should be able to go 45 to 50 from the start. I have a friend of mine thats medium framed and she shoots 52lbs. However, she shoots indoors all winter long on teams and such. I don't. I break the bow back out late spring.

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I would say if you limit your shots to 20 yards and in, and you use cut on contact heads and not expandables, I would think 35 should do it. I know Id personally rather shoot a deer with a 35 pound bow through the lungs than a shot somewhere else with 65 pounds. If your good and practice a lot, that should do it, I think 35 or 30 is the minimum in Wisconsin. I would shoot the max that you can comfortably shoot, but I would much rather have an accurate bow pulling less than a heavier draw weight that you struggle to pull back.

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Guest madabouthuntin

In NC, I think they just lowered the poundage down to 35 about 1 or 2 years ago with a compound bow. If it was anything else, it had to be higher. The reasoning for this was the compound bows today produce enough energy and speed to take an animal at that low of draw weight. The bow my son has shot was really slinging the arrows at 35 to 40 lb. It had enough energy that at 30 yards I think it would have complete pass through with a GOOD Broadhead.

Steve

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My son killed an 8 point with 32lbs of draw weight.

With modern compound bows 30 lbs will generate enough energy to take a whitetail. The key is having a good tune, the correct arrow, and a cut on contact broadhead. Also limit shots to 20 yards and under and only take broadside or quartering away shots. I would also shoot a medium to heavy arrow for that draw weight.

My son was shooting 26 inch 1816's with a Steelforce broadhead and at 17 yards quartering away the arrow went in up to the nock. So he had plenty of penetration.

Just get her started at whatever weight is comfortable for her to shoot accurately and go from there.

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