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Main Boards => PowWow => Topic started by: Aggie1993 on August 21, 2013, 09:42:00 PM
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Hello guys,
I need some help. I have several used Original Woodsman glue on broadheads and want to install screw-in adapters. However, I filed the needle tip down when they were on woodies. I would like to know how I can insure they are aligned correctly without any wobble. The tip is no longer "perfectly" aligned due to the filing and wobble.
Has anyone determined how to aligned them even though the tip is not perfect?
Thanks for your help.
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Can get yourself an arrow spinner tool. That's a gizmo that has two sets of rollers about a foot apart. By rolling your arrow shaft on it, you can check for broadhead wobble. Can also make your own by cutting a couple of V-blocks and gluing them upright to a piece of wood. Can glue a third flat piece about three inches further along on the wood and butt the tip of your broadhead against it as you slowly rotate the shaft. If it's inalignment, the point will stay in the same place on the stop block. If it's out of alignment, the point will trace an oval of some sort. Heat andreposition the broadhead as necessary until it doesn't wobble. Good luck.
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Put the insert in the arrow. Install WW with 5 minute epoxy. Install and spin on table. You'll get it as good as needed. At least that's what I'd try.
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Thanks Orion. I have the arrow spin tester and have tried it. The problem is that the tip is not perfect due to me filing it in a pyramid shape. Should the tip still spin in one place even if it was filed a little off center?
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I use the tip for alignment and for that reason,when I file the tip for any reason,tanto etc,I use the alignment jig to keep the tip centered and true.I often check alignment after a miss or hit on game so it is important to keep the tip filed evenly.
The tip can't possibly spin true if filed off center.Sorry,I don't know how to reverse the process.
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Just File the Tanto Tip VERY Carefully!! :thumbsup:
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That's kinda what I was afraid of.....
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Use your spin tester and make crosshair on a piece of cardboard or paper. Make the crosshair to sit level with your broadhead when sitting on the spin tester. Place your arrow with broadhead on the tester put your crosshair just in front of the broadhead and slowly turn. See if it goes off to the side or up or down. Turn on the shaft till the point moves the least away from your crosshair. That will be as close to align as you will get. Then shoot if it flies where you are looking then good to go. If it planes well try the next one. I bet they will fly straighter than you think.
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Yeah, with the point skewed, it makes life more difficult, but, get er the best you can.
The spinner is the way to go, it will certainly show you if the head is way off, you will see this with no help from crosshairs or dots.
Spin and watch and see if the movement is because of the head alignment or the tip alignment (due to filing).
Certainly you can compare the flat plane even if you did do some filing. If the flat of the broadhead moves as compared to the "dot" then it is not straight.
Then shoot the arrow and see how it flies.
CHuckC
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Go back and file the tips where each bevel is the same as the others and where the point is back in the middle.. Cast a critical eye on them and file where necessary. With care you can get them back to the point they will spin well..
I file points all the time. Generally I'll mount the broadhead to where it's spinning well then file the point to the profile I want being very cautious to keep the point centered, in the middle of the broadhead.. Much easier to do correctly the first time than it is to go back and eyeball them and try to correct a non centered point.. BUT, you can do it, a little time and patience and you'll have them spinning like a top!
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I would think if you want a perfectly centered point, you will have to re-file the tip. You could use your alignment spinner to get the the circle made by the off-center tip as small as possible. You will then know the head is aligned with the shaft. Then re-file the tip to bring the circle to a point.
Sounds a bit time consuming to me, but I've wasted more time than I can count on less important things :)
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That makes sense Bladepeek.
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I am thinking. . if the broadhead is out of alignment by a bunch, wouldn't that cause a sort of corkscrew movement during the pass through, cutting more area and causing more damage. Similar, but on a larger scale, to a single bevel head ? Might be a good thing !
:scared:
ChuckC
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shoot them & see.
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I mount my Woodsmans, spin them on my jig and make sure that they are perfect ,. then file the tanto tip and check on the jig. I file until they are perfect again. Once done like this you can mount them on any arrow and spin to the tip and be good.
God bless, Steve
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I'm not really sure but it seems to me that if you have an arrow spinner, you could just mount the arrow as per usual and put a 90 degree square up against a blade. If any of the two other blade either moves the square or moves away from the square you have an alinement issue at the point no matter what shape it may be.
Regards,
Dan
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What Dan said! :thumbsup:
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Thanks for your ideas. Dan, I'm going to give that a try and see. Thanks again for your comments and help.