3Rivers Archery


The Trad Gang Digital Market












Contribute to Trad Gang and Access the Classifieds!

Become a Trad Gang Sponsor!

Traditional Archery for Bowhunters




RIGHT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS

LEFT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS

TRAD GANG CLASSIFIEDS ACCESS


Main Menu

Cedar Arrow Shaft Selection

Started by BCR1985, December 29, 2025, 11:12:35 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

SC Bowhunter, BruceT, Buckeye1977, Mike Bolin, Surffever, Deno, Phil Magistro, RG in Idaho, Squirrel Hunter, 1Trapper, gifford, MO, WMS, BCR1985 and 8 Guests are viewing this topic.

BCR1985

Hi Gang,

I'm trying to select the correct weight of cedar shafts for my new setup. I am shooting a Browning Wasp 42#@28. My draw length is 27-27.5. I'd like to use a 30-inch shaft if possible, with a 190-200 grain head. I looked at multiple spine selection charts. The general consensus based on the charts was 60-65 spine. However, when I called and spoke with a rep from Three Rivers, his recommendation was 50-55. He also advised that their company spine chart was on the heavier side. I am torn on this. Any advice or recommendations to break the stalemate would be appreciated.

Best,

Ed

Kelly

Because a 30" shaft is ten pounds spine weaker than a 28" one, of which all wood shafts are spined for. And your use of 190-200 grain points weakens it another 10 pounds spine.

Why do you want to use such a long arrow?
>>>>============>

Enjoy the flight of an arrow amongst Mother Nature's Glory!

Once one opens the mind to the plausible, the unbelievable becomes possible!

>>>>============>

Yours for better bowhunting, Kelly

M60gunner

What Kelly said. Long arrow, heavy point make the shaft weaker. Part of what I call the "5# rule".

Stumpkiller

55-60#.  Does Three Rivers still sell bare "try shafts" of three different spines?  Try 50-55, 55-60 and 60-65#.
Charlie P. }}===]> A.B.C.C.

Bear Kodiak & K. Hunter, D. Palmer Hunter, Ben Pearson Hunter, Wing Presentation II & 4 Red Wing Hunters (LH & 3 RH), Browning Explorer, Cobra II & Wasp, Martin/Howatt Dream Catcher, Root Warrior, Shakespeare Necedah.

Orion

I agree with Kelly.  If you went to keep your arrows that long and points that heavy, you're going to need the heavier spine.

Tajue17

Im not a gap shooter but a local friend has long arrows that are a specific length so his gap distance works,, maybe thats why the longer arrows but im just guessing,,,, if not i agree trim them back.
"Us vs Them"


Contact Us | Trad Gang.com © | User Agreement
Copyright 2003 thru 2025 ~ Trad Gang.com ©