I'm a little confused at the Value for A, and adding it to (t). Since the speed of sound would be considered 'lag' time in the measurement, I would expect to subtract the value of A from (t). Or perhaps i'm not understanding correctly. Maybe I should be getting a negative value for A?
If you set up the mic right beside the bow at 20 feet, the sound of the twang would be almost instant, but the sound of the impact would have to travel back to the microphone 20 feet, therefore, your arrow would impact .017 seconds (20/125) before the microphone hears it actually impact.
So it is confusing to add the
A/c (the adjustment for sound to travel) to
t. Like you said intuition would have you subtract
A/c. Truth is, it depends on where you place your mic. If you're imagining it like you are, where the mic is next yo you, then
A computes to be a negative number. As we should know, adding a negative is in fact subtracting. However, If you placed your mic near the target it would be the opposite and you would be adding it to
t.
For example, when I did it, I was 21 feet away from the target. However, my mic was 3 feet behind me and thus 24 feet away from the target.
A was then 3-24 or -21 feet. In the pictures you can see this with a 30 lb recurve I measured. You can't tell the time in the default view it pops up as (in image 1), but if you zoom in on the spot (the two peaks to the right) then you get what you see in image 2. If you highlight the release and impact and hit the length button on the bottom it will tell you the time it took to the millisecond. As you can see in the bottom of image 2 it took 0.207 seconds.
Now I have all the information I need to compute the speed:
Z = 21 feet,
t = 0.2 seconds,
A = -21 feet, and
c = 1125 feet/second. Therefore
V = 21/(0.207 + (-21/1125)). This comes out to be 112 fps.
The sound pattern it makes right after release is also interesting. I wonder how much it will vary from bow to bow.
I tend to do about 4-6 shots in one recording and get the average time it takes. I noticed that in some of them it was clear enough to distinguish the string swoosh from when the arrow leaves and other times the whole twang was one blur so I just measured it from the beginning. I would suggest putting the mic close to you vs close to the target since the twang is a more precise sound.