I'm getting into shooting a compound bow (I only have very small amount of recurve experience...). I picked up a PSE Nova L3 with then intention of shooting with a release. Well, I haven't found one I've liked yet, but just starting the release search. Anyway, I've thought about shooting fingers in the meantime and pulled the bow back, two fingers under the arrow, and not much pinch at all, not what I was expecting based on what I've read on the internet. Being a numbers guy I pulled out the old geometry equations from the deep reaches of my brain and determined why I didn't get pinched. It got me thinking that maybe axle to axle length isn't the only thing that determines finger pinch.
So, when you pull a bow back to full draw you have a right angle triangle. The vertical axis runs from the arrow up to the top of the upper wheel ((axle length /2) + 1.5" assuming 3" wheel). The horizontal line from where the string sits at rest to full draw (draw length - brace height). To calculate the angle at the nock/arrow I used the equation Angle = 90 / ((horizontal axis / vertical axis) + 1).
Doing this a PSE Dakota (often referred to as a good fingers bow) with 41" axle to axle length, 30" draw length, and 7 1/4" brace height would have a vertical axis of 22", a horizontal axis of 22.75", which would give it an angle at the nock/arrow of 44.2 degrees. Multiply by 2 for both upper and lower triangles (above an below the arrow) and you get an 88.4 degree angle to get your fingers and arrow into.
With that as my baseline I figured up my PSE Nova L3, 36 1/2" axle to axle, 28" draw length, and 7 1/2" brace height. It has a vertical axis of 19.75" and a horizontal axis of 20.5", giving it an string angle of 44.2 degrees. That would give me the same 88.4 degree angle as longer axle to axle, longer vertical axis Dakota. But the longer draw length and short base height of the Dakota baseline gives it a longer horizontal axis as well, negating the longer axle to axle length advantage.
I also read in another post that howie got a pse bruin l3, 29" draw. It would have a 86.6 degree angle to get his fingers into. A 36" axle to axle, 29" draw, 8" brace height. That would be a 19.5" vertical axis, 21" horizontal axis, giving a 43.3 degree angle at the arrow, times 2 for upper and lower triangles (above and below the arrow) and he will have 86.6 degree angle for his fingers, only a 1.8 degree difference.
To compare to a short axle bow, like a pse Firestorm with 30" axle to axle, 29" draw, 8" brace height, it would have a vert axis of 16.5", horizontal axis of 22", and an angle at the arrow nock of 38.6 degrees. Times two for above and below the arrow an you're putting your fingers into 77.2 degrees, or 11.2 degree reduction from the baseline 30" draw 41" axle Dakota and my 28" draw 36 1/2" axle nova. A real pincher!!!
So saying a finger bow has to have an axle length 40+ inches is only taking one side of the triangle into the equation. To actually figure the angle of the string and therefore the pinch of a bow you have to figure the axle length, draw length, and base height.
Atleast that's the what my old math brain cells are telling me. What do you guys think?
later,
scruffy