Nice post. I like your future proposal of the 4mm VAPs very much. I like Sirius Archery’s shafts as well. My carbon lengths are even longer than yours and that’s why I’m always looking to take weight out of the middle. Since going to ethics insert/outsert systems, I’ve had no issues with arrow integrity at all. That’s drawn me to the conclusion the integrity all comes at the front end.
I keep trying to get a consensus opinion on “maximum relevant FOC” from qualified heavy arrow African archers and I can’t seem to find out what the number may be? Ashby keeps saying more and more is better, over 30% being amazing (not sure you nor I could ever achieve that at our lengths?).
The thing to beware with Cam Haynes and John Dudley as A.) they are american big game hunters, and B.) they are drawing crazy heavy bows, and C.) they are heavily sponsored as their livelihood, so they are going to represent products with the widest appeals which are not the products we would use at our size nor game interests. They are certainly the best bow instructors I’ve found so I watch them for “how to shoot” instruction rather than “how to build for Africa” stuff.
Ranch Fairy is good, but his subject matter is hogs so even that is a bit of correlation and experimentation. I will say his project dik-dik experiment was the starting point we used for small youth Africa setups and they did work out pretty well with one exception relevant to this thread: The Samurai broadheads absolutely stunk. Bent, broken tips, edge chatter even when going through impala ribs, and I had to fight tooth and nail to get them to give my kid his money back, ultimately filing a CC dispute during the 90 day AMEX return period.
Cant argue against any of your points either.. I think you are likely very much spot on on all of the above..
Part of what I have been enjoying about archery is also what is most frustrating... the journey of getting to accurate, deadly capability at reasonable hunting distances (50 yards or less?) is incredibly challenging.. Its not nearly as simple as buying an off the rack Ruger American in 308, slapping a $199 vortex scope on top of it, and hitting the range with a $29 box of ammo.. and voila! 30 minutes later you are deadly to 200 yards on just about anything that walks the planet that weighs 600lbs or less..
There is a whole lot more involved.. and EVERYTHING really does matter.. its not just quality of equipment, design and engineering of the individual pieces of equipment, etc.. its also how each piece of equipment integrates with the other... The bow matters, the string matters, which cam you have matters, how its tuned matters, the sight matters, the rest matters, etc..etc.. and thats completely separate from the arrow.. where every component matters.. but even after building the perfect arrow, there is no guarantee that perfect arrow is perfect for your bow...
Sure you can much like the ruger american analogy go to Cabelas and buy a "hunt ready" Diamond Edge for $399.. buy some basic arrows, practice for a couple of weeks, and be able to reliably kill a whitetail out to 20 or maybe even 30 yards if youre good enough... but if you start talking distances any further than that, or any game that is notably more difficult to kill.. all of the minutia starts to add up quickly.. (making things super fun.. and super frustrating.. all at the same time)..
I admit I have gone deep down the rabbit hole lately.. and Im going to end up with tons of extra "stuff" just laying around before its all over with... extra releases, extra sights, extra arrows, extra broadheads (and field points), etc.. hell.. Ive even swapped out peeps twice already (first guy told me "go with a big peep.. faster target acquisition!".. then the next guy told me "think in terms of a rifle peep... smaller is better.. more precise.. easier to make longer shots more accurately".. to which I realized I had been suckered in my first line of thinking.. the second line was far better for my intended application...)...
The good news is in a matter of just a few months I have seen shots go from "thats adequate for hunting and taking a shot out to 30".. to "thats pretty damn good.. I'd be perfectly comfortable loosing an arrow at kudu sized game out to 50"... all of the tweaking, tuning, and practice is paying off demonstratively.. And I've gotten a lot of very good information from the more experienced guys here that have kept me from following too many wrong paths and kept the learning curve steep in a positive direction... (thank you guys for that!)