Free: Contests & Raffles.
Tuning a bow is all about arrow flight. Put a broadhead on the front, and you've just added wings to catch the air and plane differently than a field point. Once the arrow flight is correct, then the broadheads and field points will hit in the same place. You need to move the rest to get the arrow leaving the bow perfectly straight, otherwise it will plane (catch air and veer off course) and not hit the same as field points.Broadheads hitting below the field points in a straight line means move your rest up 1/16" and try again. You may need to move as much as 1/8" with the amount you were talking about being off, but I'm thinking 1/16" is about right. By moving the rest up, your field point impact will now be a bit higher, but your broadheads will move further and eventually get caught up to where they hit in the same place. This assumes several things: broadheads and field points are same weight, there is no fletching contact with the rest, the broadheads spin true with the arrow, and your form stays somewhat consistent between broadheads and field points. Check these assumptions thoroughly before moving the rest. Put lipstick on the vane edges and see if it shows up on the rest. Spin the arrow to look and feel for a wobbling tip. Tighten a little more or swap around those that wobble until they spin perfect.Now, if you've got a Whisker Biscuit...... Forget the lipstick because you know you've got serious vane contact. Moving the rest does the same thing with the biscuit as far as trying to eliminate planing, but going too far will cause the tail to kick in the opposite direction and compound your problem. If moving it up doesn't seem to help, then try moving it down since tail kick could have been the problem all along.Once you are happy with the broadheads and field points hitting in the same place, then you move your sight to make that point be in the center of your target.You're talking about turkey hunting, so penetration isn't a problem. But, come September, moving just the sight will leave the poor arrow flight in place and will greatly reduce your penetration. A true-flying arrow will penetrate far better than a wobbly (untuned) one and will very likely mean a pass through on an elk versus 12" penetration and a single lung hit that's hard to recover.
Here is a good read. Also go to the links under the Tuning Tab. And at the bottom of the page.http://www.redhawk-archery.com/bh-tuning.html
you need to move pins for broadheads.