Ramblin99
Well-Known Member
I shoot a Scorpyd Ventilator Extreme 175#, HHA and Leupold VX-R scope. 435gr arrow at 435fps. As Buck Buster says, too many things can happen beyond 40 yards. EVERY crossbow is extremely loud in the woods. You and your buddy need to go out into the woods and each other listen from 50 yards away as you and he shoot the bow. You will be surprised. And the inevitable loud noise it makes has significant implications for whitetail hunting. Here is a true story. Three years ago I shot at a doe standing at 55 yards from me. Before the arrow arrived she dropped about 8 inches to launch, and lurched forward about a foot when the arrow arrived and impacted her high and back. I lost that deer. So I went back and did the math to understand what happened. Using 1156 fps as the speed of sound and a steady rate of arrow slowing in flight, I figured out that the doe heard my Scorpyd crossbow fire when the arrow was 28 yards from me and still had 27 yards to go to reach her....at 435 fps launch speed! With a whitetail's amazing reaction time, that's an eternity. I learned my lesson. The longest shot I will take now is 45 yards, and only under certain circumstances. And I always aim at the heart no matter the length of the shot. Yes most of the crossbows offered today can shoot long distances. I enjoy the challenge of long-distance target shooting. My best 3-shot group at 80 yards is 1.25". And long distance shooting teaches you the importance of how to hold the bow consistently. But don't for a second think you can shoot a deer that far. In Alabama if i shot at a deer standing 80 yards from me the deer wouldn't be standing there when the arrow arrived. A complete miss.
Keith
Keith