To promote a draw you should put the heaviest weights behind the toe of the driver. This will slow the heel down so the toe will go through the ball first promoting the draw. For a moderate draw you should put one heavy weight behind the heel, and one on the toe side of the middle.
For an extreme draw you put the heaviest weights on the heel side. For a mid draw you put one heavy weight on the heel side and the other on the right side of the middle.
30" is not a draw weight, it is a draw length. It is the length of the draw from the bow to the string when the bow is drawn.
Draw weight is the power the arrow is loosed at. Bows with more draw weight like long bows require very strong people to handle. The better the draw weight the further/harder the arrow flies eg: Arrows peircing chainmail... Hope this was the answere you were looking for. Enjoy...
The draw weight should be marked on the bow. You cannot go any higher than the marked draw weight unless your bow has removable limbs, then you could buy limbs with a higher draw weight. You will ruin the bow if you use it with a higher draw rate.
no! it is more important that the draw weight be comfortable to you. however if you use a 70 pound draw, the arrow will travel faster, straighter and with more force(better penetration). It depends upon your ability to draw & hold the bow, and what you plan to hunt with it. If you can hold at full draw for 8-10 seconds without fatigue or shaking then you are in good shape. I always thought that heaver draws were better but then realized by using lighter arrows I was able to mock the heaver ratio of more weight. You so lose some kenitic energy down range but if you have a shot within 20 yards it really won't matter. Most clean kills are within this range anyhow.
To draw attention and promote what it is that's being advertised.
"Draw weight" is a measure of the strength required to draw a bow as well as the force it imparts on the arrows it shoots. It is usually measured in pounds.
70 lb draw weight is a high up there in draw weight, pretty much anything in north America can be hunted. a good shot is key to any bow hunt
http://www.dnr.sc.gov/regs/pdf/huntingregs.pdf No restrictions on draw weight in SC.
80 pounds is a very low draw weight for a crossbow and a very high draw weight for a standard bow
The draw weight is adjusted by tightening or loosining the screws that hold the limbs in their pockets attached to the riser.
the average Draw weight for deer, turcky and hog is between 60 and 70 lb