Can You Overdraw a Recurve Bow? Archery Safety and Equipment Care

Avoid overdrawing a recurve bow to prevent injury and damage to the equipment.

Protective Gear and Maintenance

  • Put on an arm guard when shooting to protect your arm from injury.
  • Check your bow and arrows thoroughly before shooting; wood arrows can crack and bow limbs can become damaged.
  • Safely string your bow with a bow-stringer.
  • Keep the string waxed following manufacturer recommendations, or after every 100 shots if none given.

Understanding Overdraw

What is Overdraw?

Overdrawing a recurve bow implies pulling the string back past the bow’s design limit, which might injure yourself and damage your equipment.

When is Overdrawing Permissible?

  • Only overdraw for clout shoots, not standard target archery.

Overdraw Limits for Compound Bows

  • Yes, but World Archery limits overdraw to 6 cm from the grip.

The Impact of Overdraw

  • Shorter, faster arrows.
  • Hit farther distances.
  • Affects arrow spine, adding 3-4 lb of draw weight per inch.

Risks and Consequences

  • Risk of dry firing, damaging the bow and archer.
  • Torque effects that cause inconsistent arrow flight.

Archery Injuries

  • Muscle aches and bruises if dry fired.

Bow Care and String Maintenance

Why and When to Unstring Recurve Bows

  • To prevent injury and bow damage from the pressure.
  • Fiberglass bows only need unstringing for storage.

String Maintenance

  • Change bow string every 300-500 shots, adjust frequency with heavier draw weights.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • How fast can a 50 lb recurve shoot? A 50-55 lb recurve shoots around 175 fps with a 550 grain arrow.
  • Ideal full draw hold time? 30 seconds, without shaking or struggling.
  • Common recurve lengths? 58, 60, and 62 inches. Match to your draw length.

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