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I love wooden arrows, however,..

Started by Critch, July 27, 2014, 08:41:00 PM

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Critch

I was shooting some Easton Axis 500 arrows yesterday. They have traditional fletching and a wood grain appearance,,,good Lord they fly straight, silent and fast....I may invest in 6 ore of these...

I'm always torn about how far to go with traditional...accuracy and speed count for something...
I don't know if the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or imbeciles who mean it. -Mark Twain

nineworlds9

I love the Axis Trads, love the Beman Centershots even more, same look with a traditional insert and a little cheaper.
52" Texas Recurve
58" Two Tracks Ogemaw
60" Toelke Chinook
62" Tall Tines Stickflinger
64" Big Jim Mountain Monarch
64" Poison Dart LB
66" Wes Wallace Royal
            
Horse Creek TAC, GA
TBOF

JEFF B

hey buddy if they shoot good and ya hit the spot thats all ya  need. me i love river cane arrows when i can get em as they do it for me.
'' sometimes i wake up Grumpy;
other times i let her sleep"

TGMM FAMILY OF THE BOW

dnovo

I love wood arrows. I love making them and shooting them.
I don't let myself be tempted by look a likes.
PBS regular
UBM life member
Compton

monkeyball

I love wood arrows too,really miss that Cedar smell when tapering them or picking up two pieces that use to be one.


No arguing the longevity of carbon though,or the penetration,when compared to woods.

 See you later Cedars,it's all about carbon for me.

                                              Good Shooting,
                                                          Craig

Kevin Dill

I love the smell of cedar, but I love the taste of tenderloin better. Since my Beman/Axis arrows fly better and out-penetrate my P.O. cedars, I'll be found using carbon...the original organic material.     ;)

culleng

I have tried both. For me I need all the help I can get ..... So   i shoot carbon.
God and family.
58" Centaur 51# @ 28

Critch

Is anyone up for a dumb question? I bought these arrows from a shop that was going out of business....my arrows are marked  "500  8.9 gr GPI", I know the "8.9" is grains per inch, but what is the "500"?

These shoot very well out of my Samick Sage 45 LB recurve.

I was looking on various sites at arrows offered there and I see some as 250, 350, 400 etc, but no explanation of what it means.
I don't know if the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or imbeciles who mean it. -Mark Twain

dhermon85

No such thing as a dumb question. The 500 is arrow spine

Critch

Purely by chance, according to some the charts out there, I happened on the right arrows for my bow...Cool beans as we used to say in our long haired days..
I don't know if the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or imbeciles who mean it. -Mark Twain

stumpinkaiser

Shooting anything other than wood arrows out of a traditional bow is....strange."

-Robin Hood

dougedwards

Same topic but I just bought two dozen cedar shafts from 3Rivers which were marked 55-60#. After staining and coating the 30" shafts and applying a wrap with nocks and a 125 gr point I went to shoot one unfletched shaft to see how it might fly.  It broke in half as soon as it hit the target.

I thought this was rather strange so I tried another one.  Same thing happened.  This is just a cardboard box stuffed with cellophane wrap so it isn't hitting a hard surface. Just as strange is that the shafts were showing very weak out of a 45# bow so I cut another shaft to 28.5" and replaced the 125 gr point with a top hat adapter (40gr) and a 75gr field point for a total of 115gr and it still showed weak (bending to the right for a right handed shooter) and again it splintered in half at about 6" back from the point.

Is it possible that these shafts are defective or mismarked?  I have been shooting carbons exclusively and now experimenting with woodies but  this isn't very encouraging.

Doug
But you brethren are not of the flesh but of the Spirit if indeed the Spirit of Christ lives within you. Romans 8

cahaba

I never bare shaft wooden shafts cause they will break every time they hit the target unless they are pretty well straight on.
It is possible that they could have been spined wrong. If it were me I would fletch up 3 and just see how they shoot. I would suggest if you are serious about shooting wood is to by or make you a spine tester. You can make one for $50.00 or less.
cahaba: A Choctaw word that means
"River from above"

alex321

I would gladly give up shooting wooden arrows, but I with my light draw weight and short draw length I cannot find an arrow which bareshafts well with a reasonable pile weight of 125 grn.  Also, the woods seem to fly better...

So now, i have taken up making arrows and fixing them... There is a certain amount of satisfaction in that, but i would rather be out shooting...
ALex

lbshooter

I think what you shoot is a very individual decision. For me I found that just like learning to shoot a stick bow well, the crafting of wood arrows that leave little to be desired to other materials can be accomplished for hunting proposes.

Hermon

QuoteOriginally posted by dougedwards:
Same topic but I just bought two dozen cedar shafts from 3Rivers which were marked 55-60#. After staining and coating the 30" shafts and applying a wrap with nocks and a 125 gr point I went to shoot one unfletched shaft to see how it might fly.  It broke in half as soon as it hit the target.

I thought this was rather strange so I tried another one.  Same thing happened.  This is just a cardboard box stuffed with cellophane wrap so it isn't hitting a hard surface. Just as strange is that the shafts were showing very weak out of a 45# bow so I cut another shaft to 28.5" and replaced the 125 gr point with a top hat adapter (40gr) and a 75gr field point for a total of 115gr and it still showed weak (bending to the right for a right handed shooter) and again it splintered in half at about 6" back from the point.

Is it possible that these shafts are defective or mismarked?  I have been shooting carbons exclusively and now experimenting with woodies but  this isn't very encouraging.

Doug
Did you make sure the grain orientation was correct when you glued the nocks on?

Sam McMichael

Shoot what you like. You may find you like both. I have shot wood, aluminum, and fiberglass through the years and liked them all. Good wood arrows will shoot more accurately than you or anybody on this forum can hold, but still, some will like carbon. No problem - that's why they make different types of arrows.
Sam

gringol

QuoteOriginally posted by dougedwards:
Same topic but I just bought two dozen cedar shafts from 3Rivers which were marked 55-60#. After staining and coating the 30" shafts and applying a wrap with nocks and a 125 gr point I went to shoot one unfletched shaft to see how it might fly.  It broke in half as soon as it hit the target.

I thought this was rather strange so I tried another one.  Same thing happened.  This is just a cardboard box stuffed with cellophane wrap so it isn't hitting a hard surface. Just as strange is that the shafts were showing very weak out of a 45# bow so I cut another shaft to 28.5" and replaced the 125 gr point with a top hat adapter (40gr) and a 75gr field point for a total of 115gr and it still showed weak (bending to the right for a right handed shooter) and again it splintered in half at about 6" back from the point.

Is it possible that these shafts are defective or mismarked?  I have been shooting carbons exclusively and now experimenting with woodies but  this isn't very encouraging.

Doug
This is pretty common when bareshafting woodies.  I find that bareshafting usually gives me a shaft the is much stiffer than I really need.  You might try fletching and comparing field points to BHs.

monkeyball

Ahh,the smell of cedar. Someone needs to invent a carbon shaft that smells like cedar. Hmmmm.

                                                 Good Shooting,
                                                                 Craig

snag

Monkeyball just cut up some of those cedar scent air conditioners for your car and shove one inside your carbons...smells like cedar and adds a little weight forward...   :biglaugh:
Isaiah 49:2...he made me a polished arrow and concealed me in his quiver.


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