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TAC 15/15i Basic Unpublished Information
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<blockquote data-quote="jon.henry755" data-source="post: 496435" data-attributes="member: 29115"><p>Hi Dorge,</p><p>I'm sure I speak for all of our forum members when I extend a warm welcome to you. We're happy to have you join us and help provide as much information as you have. </p><p></p><p>We've been slowly collecting as much technical information about the PSE TAC15's and their arrows as we can. As you may be aware Super 91 and many others have provided us with a good deal of the information and testing verifications for that we've published in this forum. </p><p></p><p>Our goal is to collect and document as much detailed information as we can. This helps all owners share this information and hopefully improve the shooting capabilities and aid in the evaluation process for future product developments. </p><p></p><p>As a personnel response to the information you've supplied, I only have one point that I'm not sure I agree with. While I understand that the Bitzenburger Fletching Vise may not be dead on accurate in its ability to index (rotate arrow shafts) at precisely 60 degree spacing or 120 degree spacing, it does rotate the exact amount of spacing each time on the same jig. That spacing might be 55 degrees or 125 degrees when going from one side of the shaft to the other, but it is the exact same spacing each time a user rotates the nock indexing knob. </p><p></p><p>That would indicate that each arrow produced on these jigs would have exactly the same spacing between each vane placed on each shaft with this jig. In order to achieve the same performance from arrow to arrow, it's necessary to maintain the same exact alignment of the vanes, but it does not need to be exactly 60 degrees or exactly 120 degrees spacing. The 120 degree spacing is used to support maximum vane clearance from the cables and the 60 degrees is a spacing between each set of vanes on the two sides of the shaft, so I fail to understand why a deviation of 4 or 5 degrees would matter as long as every arrow produced had exactly the same 4 or 5 degree deviation? </p><p></p><p>Let's use a 5 degree deviation as an example. For conversation sake we could say that the separation on the Bitz. nock receiver was 125 degrees instead of a perfect 120 degrees. It would seem that as long as every arrow produced started the next vane on the opposite side in the 125 degree position, it would mean that every arrow produced would have this same pacing and therefore fly exactly the same as long as the spines were aligned the same and all other shaft matching characteristics were pre-matched or am I missing something?</p><p></p><p>Regards,</p><p></p><p></p><p>Jon</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jon.henry755, post: 496435, member: 29115"] Hi Dorge, I'm sure I speak for all of our forum members when I extend a warm welcome to you. We're happy to have you join us and help provide as much information as you have. We've been slowly collecting as much technical information about the PSE TAC15's and their arrows as we can. As you may be aware Super 91 and many others have provided us with a good deal of the information and testing verifications for that we've published in this forum. Our goal is to collect and document as much detailed information as we can. This helps all owners share this information and hopefully improve the shooting capabilities and aid in the evaluation process for future product developments. As a personnel response to the information you've supplied, I only have one point that I'm not sure I agree with. While I understand that the Bitzenburger Fletching Vise may not be dead on accurate in its ability to index (rotate arrow shafts) at precisely 60 degree spacing or 120 degree spacing, it does rotate the exact amount of spacing each time on the same jig. That spacing might be 55 degrees or 125 degrees when going from one side of the shaft to the other, but it is the exact same spacing each time a user rotates the nock indexing knob. That would indicate that each arrow produced on these jigs would have exactly the same spacing between each vane placed on each shaft with this jig. In order to achieve the same performance from arrow to arrow, it's necessary to maintain the same exact alignment of the vanes, but it does not need to be exactly 60 degrees or exactly 120 degrees spacing. The 120 degree spacing is used to support maximum vane clearance from the cables and the 60 degrees is a spacing between each set of vanes on the two sides of the shaft, so I fail to understand why a deviation of 4 or 5 degrees would matter as long as every arrow produced had exactly the same 4 or 5 degree deviation? Let's use a 5 degree deviation as an example. For conversation sake we could say that the separation on the Bitz. nock receiver was 125 degrees instead of a perfect 120 degrees. It would seem that as long as every arrow produced started the next vane on the opposite side in the 125 degree position, it would mean that every arrow produced would have this same pacing and therefore fly exactly the same as long as the spines were aligned the same and all other shaft matching characteristics were pre-matched or am I missing something? Regards, Jon [/QUOTE]
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