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How do you keep your wood arrows sorted?

Started by jamesh76, April 25, 2011, 09:06:00 PM

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jamesh76

How does everyone keep their wood arrows sorted by spine? I dont have a spine tester yet to test them incase they get mixed up or I forget. But was thinking of just putting a certain color nock on a certain spine rating of shafts.

What does everyone else do?

James
-------------------------------
James Haney
Spring Hill, KS
_ _ _ _ _ ______ _  _  _  _  _
USMC Infantry 1996-2001
1st Marine Division
-------------------------------

Orion

I write the spine and physical weight of every arrow on the arrow, usually between the fletching.

Bjorn


Mike Vines

I write on an index card the spine and weight of arrows I build for others.  For myself, I only make 60-65# shafts, so it makes it easy to keep track of my own.
Professional Bowhunters Society Regular Member

U.S. ARMY Military Police

Michigan Longbow Association Life Member/Past President

I should write it on the shafts, I had a system of using different colored nocks to tell which were which. the orange Mercuries were for 60-65s and the yellow classic were for 55s, no wait it was the yellows for heavies and oranges were for my light weights, I know it was the green fletching for the light weights, except some of the ones with mixed nocks when I ran low on green feathers and had use yellow and chartreuse and either orange or yellow nocks. Its a perfect fool proof system. I hit this confusion last fall and my son said "where'd you learn to make arrows the University of My C##**r Itches.?"

jamesh76

I like the idea of writing it between the fletchings. I may try that.

James
-------------------------------
James Haney
Spring Hill, KS
_ _ _ _ _ ______ _  _  _  _  _
USMC Infantry 1996-2001
1st Marine Division
-------------------------------

hvyhitter

Each bow gets different color combo fletching. Keep the same for both aluminum and wood. Blue, White, barred Yellow = 65# Rose Oak recurve, Orange, White, barred Yellow = 60# Predator recurve. And so on................
Bowhunting is "KILL and EAT" not "Catch and Release".....Semper Fi!

deaddoc4444

While they are still shafts I write the spine on the end I'll be trimming off ( point end  not nock end) Then arrows are made for a specific bow with different fletch and crest for each bow. Once the arrow is made it goes to a specific bow    IF I were to get a new bow Id know if any arrows were compatible or not .
HH Big 5 71# @29
Damon Howatt/Hunter 50@28
Damon Howatt/Ventura 45@28
Damon Howatt/Bushmaster 60@28
Leon Stewart/Slammer 52@28
BIG EAST  45@28
Fedora Xtreme/Hybrid 50@28
  "Leiber Hammer als Amboss"

The Whittler

I think the army or one of the branches use to use color for numbers. Like black=7, white=0, etc. I read it on one of these sites a number of years ago. It would work good for cresting.

Stumpkiller

Resistor codes

Black 0
Brown 1
Red   2
Orange3
Yellow4
Green 5
Blue  6
Violet7
Gray  8
White 9

Or, depending how many spines you keep; no band ahead of the nock = 60-65#, one band = 65-70# and two bands = 70-75#, and three bands = 75-80#.
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.

portugeejn

I just made my own spine tester, and am about all done marking my arrows.  I write them in-between the fletching.  I tried the different colored nocks/feathers thing, but couldn't keep them straight.

jamesh76

QuoteOriginally posted by Stumpkiller:
Resistor codes

Black 0
Brown 1
Red   2
Orange3
Yellow4
Green 5
Blue  6
Violet7
Gray  8
White 9

Or, depending how many spines you keep; no band ahead of the nock = 60-65#, one band = 65-70# and two bands = 70-75#, and three bands = 75-80#.
Very slick idea. I really like this.
-------------------------------
James Haney
Spring Hill, KS
_ _ _ _ _ ______ _  _  _  _  _
USMC Infantry 1996-2001
1st Marine Division
-------------------------------

Tree Rat

QuoteOriginally posted by Stumpkiller:
Resistor codes

Black 0
Brown 1
Red   2
Orange3
Yellow4
Green 5
Blue  6
Violet7
Gray  8
White 9

Or, depending how many spines you keep; no band ahead of the nock = 60-65#, one band = 65-70# and two bands = 70-75#, and three bands = 75-80#.
Yeah, but what about the tolerance?   :p  

No color for stumping, silver for 3-D, and gold for hunting?  :D
Not all Squirrels are nuts....

GRINCH

The tolerance is always 10% unless I made them then it's 50.  :bigsmyl:
TGMM Family of The Bow,
USN 1973-1995

Red Beastmaster

I keep all my arrows in 5 gal plastic buckets with cardboard tubes. Each bucket represents a different spine. The bucket I reach into depends on which bow I have in my hand.
There is no great fun, satisfaction, or joy derived from doing something that's easy.  Coach John Wooden

kbaamigo

I have a length of 2 x 12 with 2' pieces of 10" PVC pipe screwed down on it and write spine wt on tubes.

snag

I use a permanent ink marker and write the spine weight up between the fletchings. Most all of my bows shoot the same spine weight so for the most part it isn't a concern. I do have one bow that is 2#-5#lbs lighter than the others though.
Isaiah 49:2...he made me a polished arrow and concealed me in his quiver.


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