I just thought I would add,, the average Sioux arrow was 23 inches,, so if you are learning about some Native style bows and arrows the shorter arrow and draw was used,, experimenting with short draw bows has been fun for me,, and shooting them through the chronograph shows they can be quite effecient,, as stated by some experts, it takes more skill to become accurate with the shorter bow,, but at close range very accurate,,, a 22 inche draw is nice to shoot and can shoot hard,,
my draw is whatever the bow will accomodate on the shorter bows, ,on longer bows 25 26 27 is about as long as I like,, when someone ask me what my draw is, well it just depends on the bow,, I just made a bow for a 30 inch draw and it was fun, but I prefer shorte, but when I shot that bow,, my draw was 30 inches,,,
when drawing a heavy short bow,,for example I think it takes a bit more muscle to draw 50# at 20inches, ,than 50# at 28inches,, so pulling 70# at 22 inches would be too much for me,, but if you can pull that,, it gonna shoot hard,,I am guessing a 500 grain arrow,, 180 190 fps,, thats just a guess based on a short bow I have that will shoot a 425 grain arrow 180 fps at about 55 # 23 inch draw,, so Im just guessing,,
the dogwood shafts I have been making are about 500 grains at 23 inches, so I used that example,, and the maple are about the same,,
If I was hunting I like a weight in the 400 to 500 range,,