Norb Mullaney has been testing bows for many decades and his testing procedures are the most respected in the industry. The following are scanned copies of his reports. After wading through the technical details, continue down the page to better understand what performance is in a traditional/conventional bow.
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Congratulations to Rod Jenkins, 2004 IBO Traditional Hunter Class World Champion. Rod was shooting a 66" ACS CX.
Some will argue, testing off a shooting machine as Mr. Mulaney does, doesn't relate to "real world". September 9-11, 2005 the NAA/FITA National Flight Shooting Championships was held at the Bonneville Salt Flats close to Wendover Ut. There were 5 ACS bows shot by 4 different people in 8 different classes. They walked away with 6 FITA World records and 1 NAA National record.
Bryan Perry, age 11, sent one down range in the 35# American longbow NAA intermediant/FITA Juniors class of 307 yards-4 inches which broke the previous mens record of 289 yards! The bow he shot was 27# at his draw length! This sets a new FITA World Junior and establishes a NAA National record.
Sam Rose, 17, established a FITA World record in the FITA Junior Gentlemans. 50# American Longbow class and a NAA National record in the Intermediant class.
Juli Adcock, the star of the show, set a new FITA World and NAA National record in the 35# American Longbow class, shooting 320 yards 1 foot beating the old record by 41 yards! She beat the previous mens World record by 31 yards! If that wasn't enough, in the 50# American Longbow class she broke the previous ladies World record by 104 yards! Shooting 383 yards. This excceds the mens 50# record by 25 yards. >BR>
Myself, in the 35# American Longbow class I shot 319 yards-1foot-1 inch to break the previous FITA world record by 30 yards. In the 50# American longbow class I shot 354 yards to set a new NAA National record, and in the 50# American Longbow Broadhead class, 230 yards for a new World/NAA record.
Flight shooting is probably the oldest archery sport and is recognized by both FITA and NAA. To see the results of the 2005 Championships, go to the NAA web site at:
US ARCHERY
UPDATE 2006 The United States Archery Association Regular Flight Nationals and FITA Star Championships was held at The Bonneville Flight Range in Wendover, UT. September 8th, 9th, and 10th. ACS bows set 4 more World Flight records bringing the total to 9 world records held, more then any other bow in history.
Jordan Case established and set a new world record in the ladies youth division shooting a 3 piece ACS CX in the 35# American Longbow class. Jordan is 14 years old and shot 321 yards, 1 foot, 1 inch (293.86 meters). This not only estabished the world record for the female youth division, it eclipses the adult ladies record and the adult mens 35# record! Good job Jordan!
Juli Adcock shattered the 50# American Longbow Broadhead record by shooting a 66" one piece ACS CX 240 yards breaking the long standing old record of 218. To top that off in the 50 pound Field Bow class (recurve class) she shot a 62" 3 piece ACS CX longbow 461 yards, 2 feet, 6" (422.31 meters) to bring that record back to the United States from England. The old record was set in high tail wind conditions and many felt it would stand many years. Juli did it in dead calm conditions.
Myself, I brought the 50# American Longbow World Record back to the United States from Italy shooting 369 yards, 2 feet, 6" (338.18 meters) The results of the 2006 Flight Championships can be seen at: US ARCHERY
Names to look for that were shooting ACS bows is O.L. Adcock, Juli Adcock, Jordan Case, Sam Rose, and Brian Perry.
UPDATE 2007 The United States Archery Association Regular Flight Nationals and FITA Star Championships was held at The Bonneville Flight Range in Wendover, UT. September 7th, 8th, and 9th. ACS bows set 5 more World and National Flight records bringing the total to 14 FITA and NAA National and World records held, more then any other bow type/style in history.
Marlon Torres Stepped up to the plate shooting the heaviest ACS bow ever built. We're guessing it at 140 pounds+@28". With little training this year and fighting a bout of food poisoning, Marlon sent one of his first arrows 443 yards, 2 feet, 4 inches to capture a long standing NAA national record. The old record was 408 yards.
Juli, shooting a 62" ACS 3 piece longbow in the ladies 35# Field Recurve class set a new FITA/NAA world record of 349 yards 2 feet 10 inches. Note worthy by bringing this record back to the USA from the UK.
Not to be undone, I took Juli's bow...She shoots left handed and I shoot right handed....Using her bow and shooting opposite hand, I set a new NAA national record in the 35# Field Recurve class of 368 yards 2 feet 3 inches.....
Jordan Case even though not feeling well set a new ladies NAA national youth record in the 35# Modern/American Longbow.
Lastly in the mens 70# American/Modern Longbow class I set a new NAA national and world record of 398 yards 2 inches. I could not handle this bow weight well and didn't even come close to extracting the potential this bow had drawing maybe 55-60 pounds at 25-26" but it was good enough.
It was a good shoot, weather was great. Had a little excitement this year, I had a carbon arrow in the 35# Field Recurve class blow up in the bow. Got slapped pretty good with something but no splinters through the arm.
Another fellow in one of the primative classes put a wood/bamboo arrow through his thumb. the injury was minor, no ligament or tendon damage, just bruised pride.
Ever heard of shooting yourself in the foot? :) Another fellow competing in the unlimited foot bow class did just that...Put a carbon arrow completely through his foot being stopped by the sole of his shoe. Luckily the arrow didn't splinter and no bones broken.
Next year we'll go after a few more........
Shooting the ACS CX Longbow
by
Dr. Ed Ashby
Roswell, New Mexico. UFO enthusiast world wide will recognize the name and location. They regard the purported crash of an alien space craft near Roswell as one on the major events; and major government 'cover-ups'; in the annals of alien lore. Was alien technology literally dropped to earth in the high desert country near Roswell, NM, on that hot summer's night in 1947? I think I may be beginning to wonder if it is true!
What has brought about this questioning? Well, it has to do with a bow. Not just any bow. One of O. L. Adcock's ACS CX bows. Recently, I've had the privilege of doing a respectable amount of shooting with the first of O. L.'s ACS longbows to make its way to Australia. Though it is not my bow, I did manage, not too easily I might add, to convince Cher to allow me to borrow it for a few test shots. (And it did take more than a little convincing to let me test "her bow".)
In case one fails to see the connection between the ACS CX and the crash of an alien space craft, O. L. Adcock hails from no less than Roswell, New Mexico. I might add that what I found in the ACS CX does, truly, appear to be out of this world. Let me explain.
This narrative is not intended to be a 'bow performance report'. That has previously been done - and the ACS limb design was found to be an almost unbelievable performer, in terms of its mechanical efficiency. It outperformed most every recurve bow previously tested, not to even mention other longbows. Its mechanical efficiency (how well it transferred the energy stored in its drawn limbs to the arrow) even equaled that of many of the modern compound bows.
This report is about the experience of shooting an ACS CX. The time I spent with the ACS CX was far from a definitive test, in the engineering sense of the term. What I was most interested in was its 'shootability', especially under field conditions.
Yes, I did look at the draw force curve, and it is as uniform as I have ever seen in a bow. The draw is as sweet and smooth as a bow gets. But … there is more to a hunting bow than just numbers.
First, a bit about the nomenclature. The ACS stands for "Adcock Cross Section", and is the term that O. L. has applied to his extraordinary bow limb design, which I'll describe in more detail later. The CX stands for "Carbon Extreme", because the limbs utilize carbon fiber facing and backing. It is, however, neither the facing and backing material nor the limb's core materials which, in large measure, sets the ACS CX's performance apart from other bows. It is the limb's design; the Adcock Cross Section.
From a bowhunter's perspective, I found the performance level of the ACS CX staggering. On the bow I tested, I draw only 55 pounds, at my 27" draw. As most will know, after a quarter century of intensive field testing of terminal hunting arrow performance, I have become convinced of the many virtues of hunting with an arrow of high mass.
I did my shooting test of the ACS CX with a set of six heavy hickory arrows, of a tapered profile. With 160 grain field points, the set of six arrows averaged a mass weight of 782 grains. These arrows are of the same mass weight as those I normally use off my 70 pound draw weight longbow.
After shooting several groups at 20 meters (a distance I consider to be my maximum hunting range), from numerous 'hunting positions', using both the ACS CX and my 70 pound longbow, the next test I did was to do some shooting at a 40 meter target. I was literally astounded when the ACS CX appeared to be shooting substantially flatter at 40 meters, with the heavy arrows, than was my 70 pound longbow.
After rolling a few of the arrows across the Ohler 35P chronograph I could see why! The ACS CX, at only 55 pound draw weight, averaged a 4 feet per second faster launch velocity than did my 70 pound longbow! The particular 70 pound longbow I was testing against is a 'modern' longbow, slightly reflexed and deflexed, with Tonkin Cane core and fiberglass facing and backing.
Though the level of performance of the ACS CX bow is truly outstanding for a longbow of 55 pound draw weight, it was not that which impressed me the most. What I was most impressed with was the fact that, even though it has very slender, thin limbs; I could shoot well with it!
A very pragmatic bowhunter; that's how I think of myself. Yes, there are qualities I look for in my hunting bows, but I'm not wrapped up in the bow; neither its looks nor the arrow speed it can generate. For me, the bow's purpose is to deliver the hunting arrow. I want it to do that with a monotonous regularity, under the full variety of hunting conditions; while requiring as little from me as possible. I use longbows, recurves and compound bows in my studies, and I am anything but a 'bow freak'.
Handling characteristics, things often intangible, are for more important to me than the raw energy output potential of a hunting bow. I have always been blessed with the ability to go up in bow draw weight to make up for any lack of mechanical efficiency in my bows.
In a 'serious hunting bow' I value quietness and handling ease. There must also be a smoothness of draw that gives a fluid feeling; a feeling which makes a rapid shot, or ones at moving targets, feel totally 'natural'. Hand shock must be negligible, so that follow through does not feel interrupted; and the bow must "fit me", and fit with all the nuances of a custom fitted double rifle or shotgun. But the one thing I must have in my hunting bow, above all else, is "forgiveness".
I shoot a bow a lot, and have been shooting them for near a half century, yet I have what must, surely, be one of the world's worse finger releases. This is an affliction that, during my early years of bowhunting, I struggled fiercely with. It was Ben Pearson who first showed me a solution that worked for me.
Ben's cure was simple, direct and effective. He told me to work up to a heavier draw weight bow; one having a long overall bow length; and to shoot a bow whose limbs had a high mass, especially towards the limb's tips.
The longer length makes the string angle less acute when the bow is drawn, and the 'finger pinch' is less. This helps reduce the tendency to drag a finger off the string. High limb mass, and especially mass towards the tips, does, however, result in some loss in a bow's mechanical efficiency. The lower mechanical efficiency requires that, to get equal arrow speed with a bow of that design, one must use a significantly higher level of draw weight, but this bow design makes the limbs very stiff; very difficult to 'twist', or, more precisely, to flex, laterally.
The logic behind Ben's cure was precise. The higher 'holding weight' of the high poundage traditional bows tends to literally rip the string from one's fingers, minimizing the amount of string and limb torque caused by a poor release. High mass in the bow's limbs gave them the strength to recover from a poor release, literally forcing the string back into alignment with the arrow quickly when the bowstring is released. The somewhat slower forward movement of the higher mass bow limbs also provides slightly more time for the string to recover from the influence(s) of a poor release, before the arrow leaves the string. All these elements work in accord to negate the effects of a poor release on the arrow's flight.
The final element in Ben's recommendation was follow-through. Forget about the bad release. Use a bow design that helps counter and correct the bad release's effects and then concentrate on developing a good follow-through. In other words, stay on target until the bow has had time enough to correct for the bad release and the arrow has left the bow.
The solution worked very well and, through the years, I came to prefer that all my serious hunting bows have limbs that are narrow and thick. Under the pressures of a hunting situation it is often difficult to do everything 'textbook'. There is no doubt in my mind that forgiveness in my hunting bows has, in many instances, turned what would have otherwise been a marginal, or even miserably deficient, shot into one that was more than "close enough to kill".
In my many field studies, of necessity, I am forced to use a wide variety of bows. It has been a consistent experience that I can not, due to my poor release, shoot any bow with a holding draw weight much below 70 pounds very accurately, 'off the fingers' (and this, along with their acute string angle, is the reason that I cannot shoot compounds accurately with a finger release, and am forced to use a release aid). It was my meeting with the ACS CX that has now called this preconception of mine into question.
The ACS CX has very thin, light and quick limbs. Unlike any other 'mid draw weight' bow, possessing those design features, that I have ever shot before, I found that I could shoot this 55 pound bow at least as accurately, if not slightly more so, under field conditions, as I could any of my heavier draw weight bows, from 70 pounds on up.
The reason for this is the, somewhat radical and revolutionary, constantly changing radius of curvature of the ACS CX's limb design. In cross-sectional profile, the limbs have an arch to them, with the limb's facing being concave and the backing being convex. The degree of arch increases progressively as it approaches the limb's tips. This arched cross-sectional configuration of the limbs markedly increases their rigidity, both longitudinally and laterally, without adding anything at all to the mass of the limbs.
The design of the ACS CX's limbs makes them very stiff towards the limb tips. All else being equal, having stiffer limb tips translates into higher bow performance.
The only flaw I could find at all about this particular bow it is that the grip did not fit me well. Rather understandable. Cher's hand span is only slightly more than half as great as mine!
Is the ACS CX truly revolutionary? Is it the natural progression of man's technology, a result of new materials and applications? Or … could it just possibly be … that they really do incorporate extraterrestrial technology? I'm not even certain that I want to know the answer to that question, but, as all the bows I've ever owned have had female personalities - and female names - if I ever do get an ACS CX of my own, I think I might just have to name it 'Venus'; or, perhaps, after one of the 'alien' female Star Trek characters!
It has been a long, long, long time since I truly lusted for a bow; but the ACS CX? The thought of using a bow with a 15 to 20 pound lighter draw weight; possessing all the shooting and handling qualities I so value in a hunting bow; and that would still produce the tried and proven, devastatingly effective, arrow momentum levels of Lady, my much loved 94 pound longbow with which I've taken well over 300 big game animals, worldwide? I'm beginning to fear that I might just have to plead guilty!
By: O.L. Adcock Many are drawn to traditional gear as an escape from the high-tech "speed is everything" world. "Speed" and "Performance" are not the same thing. Many perpetuate the myth that the performance difference between traditional bows is minimal so just buy one that feels good and shoot it. I also used to believe this myth until we started testing other bows and learned what performance really is. There is a huge difference in bow performance between many makers.
First and formost, a bow should do 2 things....Fit you to the point you can deliver an arrow accuratly and second...With as much power as possible for the draw weight and draw length you are shooting. After those 2 things are met, if it's pleasing to the eye so much the better. Accuracy is one of those subjective things that can not be quantified. Folks have been argueing for centuries over which design is more accurate then another. All one has to do is look at bows used in Olympic competition to see what ultimate accuracy looks like. Mass in the riser is the number 1 quality in an accurate bow.
Performance on the other hand can be measured and quatified in an scientific and objective manner. If a person could see objective testing data of all bows made today, you would see there is a huge split between the best and the worst out there. You would see a 45#@28" bow that can shoot a 500 grain arrow as fast as another bow that is 60#@28". THAT IS PERFORMANCE! You would see bows that will perform as well at 9 grains/pound drawn to 24" as others do at 9 grains/pound drawn to 28". THAT IS PERFORMANCE!
Most bow manufactures either will not subject their bows to independant testing to ASTM standards or have and do not publish the data. I wonder why?? Some find it easier to make high AMO claims or simply throw around the words "High Performance".
When you do see objective performance data between 2 bows, every foot per second is roughly 1% in KE. Every 4 feet per second is roughly 1 inch of draw length or 3-4 pounds of draw weight. 10fps difference between one bow to another in a fair test means the better one will perform as well at 26" as the other will at 28". The better one will perform as well as the other with the same arrow at 5-6 pounds less draw weight. The better one will shoot a heavier arrow the same speed as the other one. Ever heard the advice given to those just starting out "shoot as much draw weight as you can accuratly"? That has to mean performance is important. I know when I crowd the upper limit of my capabilities, my accuracy suffers. I tire quicker and don't practice as much. Too much draw weight will get you into bad habits quicker then anything. It's nice to know I can shoot less pounds and not sacrfice performance over other bows that put marketing, lipstick, and lip service as a higher priority...... Site design by RFD Web Design |