My bow is pretty flat shooting as is. Out to about 30 yards, I can and do use 1 pin. I'll hold a little high over 25 yards, but not much.
In the woods around here, over 25 yards is pretty unrealistic of a shot, and I can't immagine over 30. The only place you'd get any farther is shooting over a pasture or crop field, and there are few places for that here. I'm perfectly satisfied with my rig's performance, and really not excited about trading except for a couple of things. 1, my bow is 6 years old now, and you know how it is, you go look at the new creations and lust a little, but then I look at the price sticker, and that kinda puts a hold on the lusting for a little bit.
I tried carbon arrows once and absolutely hated them. I busted 2 of them. One evidently cracked on the previous shot and I didn't notice it. The next set when I shot it, splinters went everywhere. My thought then was, i don't want that in my meat. What if it blows up in the deer? I'd have to discard a lot of meat to insure I didn't get a fiberglass splinter in my neck. Those were early versions, and I'm sure they have improved. Still, I went back to shooting my aluminum Eastons and never looked back.
I would think if I were shooting under 220 fps and had to have 3 pins to do it, then there might be a gain to be made by speeding up. At 220 with a 540 grain arrow, you are at 58 foot pounds where I'm at 75 with my set up and a 450 grain arrow. His 46 or so pounds is significantly less than either, and I wonder if that's sufficient. I suppose the smaller diameter arrow will still make it though mostly because there's less effort required to push through a skinnier shaft.
I wonder on these new rigs, when they advertise a speed what are they shooting to measure it with? When I went from my Whitetaill II years ago to my first Hoyt, it was night and day difference in speed, the second Hoyt isn't much faster than the older one, but still has there been some leap in technology that has pushed the speed up again without sacrificing the bullet so to speak? I saw on one bow site a guy claiming his bow is shooting 400 fps. I don't believe that for a minute, but maybe it's possible.
Skipper