Heard a few mention shooting fiberglass arrows. Anyone here shoot them for hunting other than bowfishing? Where do you get quality fiberglass shafts? How does fiberglass hold up as far as straightness goes?
Fiberglass arrows were common about 30 years ago, but I don't know of anyone making them anymore. They were hollow tubes like today's carbons, not the fishing arrows you are familiar with.
You may find some old stock from time to time, but most of them are gone. I like them, and we used to say that they were either straight or broken.
Check with Foxfire Archery, they may have some old stock.
In the days of past, other than solid fish arrows. I don't think anyone makes them anymore. I did just buy a 1/2dz Shakespeare Rifled fiberglas shafts off from (it). Only because they where wearing Pearson Deadheads! :thumbsup: And I had to have those to try! They are neat looking shafts just like your old Wonder Rod fly rod! The shafts are in great shape just have'nt had a chance to send them down range or anything else. I can't imagine them holding up very well. Although I did have some old Glasflex shafts 25 years ago that where pretty tough. Theres still one or two in one of my old quivers. Better go stumpen with them!
Brent
Then again I've been wrong before!
I have never used the old tubular ones (before my time), but I love hunting with the solid fiberglass shafts. Love all that extra weight...
Bowspirit,
Would you give me details on the solid fiberglass shafts...where do you get yours?, how straight do they hold, what weights are they?
foxfire archery...has some fiberglass arrows.. I believe they are the hollow type.. and priced good....
If I were to guess the weight (sorry, no scale), I'd be confident in saying that they're in excess of 1,000 grains.
You can buy them from stores that sell bowfishing shaft materials, or do what I do, and buy fiberglass poles of the same (5/16") diameter and cut em to length.
For some reason, some of the poles of been getting recently are none too straight. But simple culling gets rid of that problem. If they're straight when you get em, they're like carbon or aluminum: they stay that way...
And about the ones from Foxfire...I think they only go up to a #47 spine...
Black Gold - It doesn't matter if solid fiberglass shafts are straight. They are made primarily for shooting fish and weigh about 1500 grains. Tubular fiberglass is a whole nother thing. They are straight, relatively light and make great hunting shafts. However they are no long produced....Van
Why wouldn't it matter if solid fiberglass shafts were straight???
Black Gold
About the only people shooting 1000 gr plus arrows are shooting 100-150lb bows at elephants. Or fish at short range through water.
Brent
Then again they will have a smack factor on piggys at short range! :bigsmyl:
Thanks Hormoan....Just trying to learn as much as I can.
I will agree, Black Gold, there is a LOT of work involved in shooting arrows that heavy. I think they make great small game arrows, but you have to constantly practice with them. I just use them because they usually spine just right for my bow, and can stand up to alot of abuse...