Nance, just curious what the actual weight of the arrow was, since you said it was light?
Also whether it seemed to you the bow felt like it stacked or not?
The arrows were full carbon gold tips with 60 grains arrow heads. I use them for my flatbow and brought them to try the longbow instead of risking damage to the stores arrows.
No, I didn't feel stacking. Drawing it felt smooth. Heavier than I'm used to but I shoot a 30# bow and this was 43#.
I know I'm not a great archer as I have been shooting for less than a year. I have been mucking about with anchor points so I lost some in performance. My target scores are back to 3 and up. Before lengthening draw length (and anchor ) it was 5 and up at 18m
I don't know what length and specific model those gold tip arrows are, but just as a guess I think with the tips they may have been 300-350 grains. total. Not saying the bow wasn't faulty, I bet it was. But using a little heavier arrow might be helpful if you try another bow of heavier weight.
re. accuracy, has anyone checked out your arrows' spine and tip weight for your bow? 60 grains seems quite light unless the arrow is really soft spined for your light weight bow. Also, a real feather fletched traditional arrow of matched spine and weight will probably increase your score -- the lower inside plastic vane tends to kick the arrow on a traditional bow, especially in cold weather when it gets stiff. A plain hard arrow shelf can exaggerate that. This can be demonstrated by shooting off the hand.... or removing that single lower vane for a short distance target.