Kudos on just seeing that small a target at 100 feet, which would be a challenge for me without a scope. What kind of sights do you use?
You have to admire the nice flat trajectory entering the target. Assuming a target bolt, how much drop do you dial in for 100' with your bow?
Jeepers, TOG!! Whut kinda fargin octegenarian Sooper Man ya think I are?? My crossbow has a telescopic sight.
But to first address the "target/hunting bolt" thingy. It shoots carbon arrows (same as archery arrows) with target tips that weigh exactly what my Scorpion-bladed tips weigh.
Now to the sights on the thing:
There are a series of horizontal thread-wires in the sight picture of the scope. Each one represents 20 yards. So if you are sighted in for, say, 30 yards (that's me), then each horizontal wire above the base keeps you on target for that distance.
I honestly haven't a fargin clue how much drop there is, becuz all I do is line up the next thread-wire in the scope. But I can tell you that with about any good quality big-game crossbow, the trajectory rise is unnoticeable for any arc to be visible. Looks like a straight line.
The main two drawbacks?
1. You really must take a sighting shot before hunting or scoring. Temperature,
time since last use, humididity, all make the fargin thing drift. So you need one shot at least to zero the arrow impact.
I would equate it to a fouling shot with a gun.
2. Loading the mutha. It requires a six foot garrote cord that you loop over two hooks and a groove in the rear stock to form a wheel-less block-and-tackle with two pull-starter handles. Pant puf.
Once you get everything lined up like a friggin' slot machine you put your foot in the cradle on the ground and PULL on the handles until one of your ****** enlarges. Then you hear that marvelous "CHUNK" as the weapon announces it is loaded and ready for the arrow.
While we are on the subject: Since I have a Terminator shoulder and upper arm, the Game Laws people have seen fit to gimme the right to use my crossbow in bow season (before the machine-gunners spook the herd).
There is a signal result: Every single game animal I ever shot at with my crossbow went down. Never missed a deer, hawg, turkey, or (during bow season) a coyote. Shoot = Dead beastie.