Hi everyone! So I have a ton of dowels that I wanted to make some arrows out of but there are some that are a little bent. I was wondering if anyone had a good methods for straightening them out? Thanks for the help!
You can take a round screw driver shaft and rub the shaft on the outside of the bend with just enough pressure to get it straight. Sometimes you have to go little further with the pressure to get it straight. Hope this helps
If they are hardwood you will probably need to heat them. In the summer I put shafts on the dashboard of my truck, when it's cold I put them in the bow oven or use a hot air gun. When they reach about 140 deg. they become pliable and easy to straighten. I used a hot air gun on 2 dozen hex-pine shafts today.
Thanks guys. I'm using a long chain link to rub them straight. The inside round works pretty good. I guess i'll dig out the heat gun today.
heat, then pressure is the best straightening method. after warming up with a heat gun, i use the concave back of a steel slide to pressure the bends straight ...
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v82/rfdee/archery/steel3.jpg)
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v82/rfdee/archery/steel2.jpg)
That's a very interesting tool, Rob.
Is it a slide as is used in guitar playing?
Guy
Grey go to his web page I bet you can answer that. I would say yes just after a brief look at his webpage.
C.M.
I am in the process of making some hardwood shoot arrows and they need more straightening than any dowel you would consider for an arrow. I am using the heat gun and pressure method and having great success.
Couple of things I've picked up.
-Do your straightening in a couple of sessions. Get rid of main bends, then go back and straighten, then some more and finally get them arrow straight.
-when done with a session, leave them on a flat surface so gravity and their own weight don't reshape them while they cool.
-Don't test their spine while they are still warm. Got myself a thin round boomerang the other day doing that one. :knothead:
Dowels can make great arrows, sometimes. Watch the grain and check/test them real careful before shooting them. I've had several come apart on me, luckily no injuries.
Good luck and so us some photo's of your finished products.
Ok so I was looking around and found this tool on 3rivers and I decided to make one yesterday. Save myself 40 bucks!
(http://i1114.photobucket.com/albums/k525/javdiaz9/Photoon2011-01-12at0835-1.jpg)
I'm not sure if the groove is deep enough. I might make it a little deeper.
The groove shouldn't have to be deeper, Cuban. Actually a shallow groove will concentrate the pressure more locally where it is needed.
These are my primitive arrow making tools. The piece of osage with the cup hook in one end and the screw eye in the other is my arrow straightener. Works the same as the other pressure tools. I use the hook or eye to rub the outside of the bend to eliminate it. If too bad of a bend, I use heat and hand pressure to straighten. I use the arrow wrench when working with sharp kinks or working close to the end of the shaft to get leverage.
(http://i5.photobucket.com/albums/y199/PatBNC/primitive%20archer/arrowmakingtools002.jpg)
(http://i5.photobucket.com/albums/y199/PatBNC/primitive%20archer/arrowmakingtools003.jpg)
Rob, please give us more info on that tool, it looks really useful.
pat. what on earth is that tool at the bottom? is that a nock saw or something?
-hov
Yes, that is a tile blade for a hacksaw. Makes a slot just a bit smaller than a nock so you can sand it smooth when done. I just added an osage handle to it.
Pat, I like your style and choice of tools. I made a few just like em.