Pope and Hill are old bow hunter's from the 50's-60's I saw a video of Ted Nuggent trying to take a Rino with a bow, hunting is a little diffrent because you are shooting at a stationary or slow moving target usualy from the side at the heart lung area, in reality shooting a horse in that manner would drop them fairly quickly with a bow, i have seen alot of video of bow hunter's taking elk(1000 lbs or better with one arrow) and the arrow usualy pass's all the way through, the bow is a deceptively powerful weapon, it is a slow weapon though to load and shoot accurately, it can be quick to volley fire with out aiming too much, accurate aiming is what take's a little time.
Pope and many other site time when shooting when the arrow passes through the animal, even time when animal shows now awareness that it has even been shot, for a while at least.
The bows effectiveness is very good for th reasons you mention and when used en masse even against well armoured opponents the effetc on morale would be high.
Personally I find that shooting an aimed shot is more the differance in my own focus rather than any real differance in the mechanical process. Though the focus will tkae a little longer, it is only really a matter of fractions of a second.
used to bow hunt deer quit a bit haven't realy done much the last few year's, and i have watched my own arrow's splinter on rock's and such when i missed on more occasion's than i like to admit, and i hate when that happen's. lol
Yeah well it takes time to make your arrows and, when you break/loose one, you spoil the set. <img src="/forum/images/icons/frown.gif" alt="" /> The thing was to watch an arrow splinter on an angled piece of plate, which looked smooth, but obviously there is enough purchase on the point, to stop a clean deflection, but not enough mass in the wooden shaft to drive it through before breaking.
JW



