Main Discussion Area > Arrows

Spining tapered shafts

<< < (4/5) > >>

jeffp51:
I should add that I have trouble measuring spine on a fletched arrow, because the feather gets in the way of my hooks, and props one end of the arrow up.  when the weight is added, it pulls the shaft down onto the support--but this means it is impossible to zero out the scale before adding the weight, giving an inconsistent result.  I do all spine testing and bare shaft shooting prior to the finish work.

DC:
I've posted this before but I made this spine tester out of stuff I had laying around. Total cost--nothing. There is no reason that anyone couldn't build one. The chart and gauge background I got off the internet. I've calibrated it a couple of ways to test it's accuracy and it's right on.

Hawkdancer:
Jeff,
Your rig sounds very similar to mine.  I zero the caliper for every measurement as well, and my weight is 2.004 lbs,( maybe an extra zero there).  On new arrows, I do all the spine testing before finishing, too.  My finished arrows are about 35 years old, but I think the spine is no where near matched.  They seem to shoot well off my Bear Kodiak Magnum 50#, and my 46# self bow that I got from Badger.  I am sort them into sets of 6  with about a 20 gr spread.  Just too lazy to rework the whole bunch, but it would probably be good training >:D.   Thanks for the information.
Hawkdancer

jeffp51:
Hawk, I bet that is more than close enough, especially if you are a good shooter.  I think it takes some serious OCD to get any more precise in matching both weight and spine at the same time, unless you can sort hundreds of shafts at the same time.  The more arrows you want in the same set, the harder it gets, at least for me. 

Others with more experience can chime in on how much tolerance is acceptable, but it seems like it is different for each person.  I have spent the last 30 years building rc airplanes, so I have gotten used to really tight tolerances. Plus, I am a perfectionist by nature. It is my burden to bear. . .

TSA:
Hi Jeff, we find ourselves in the same boat, with an obsessive desire to get as close to the line as we can.
i agree, it takes sorting many many shafts, to start to get matched dozens.
i do feel that spine is more important than weight. many folks will say, that the average shooter , out to 20 yards wont notice the difference in weight spread over 50 grains.
we sort in 5# spine and 10gr groups, but simply because thats the industry standard.
for my own shooting, i am more than happy to have my shafts over a 20 or 30 gr spread- but all be within a pound or two of spine.

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

[*] Previous page

Go to full version