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What's your dream shafts?

Started by snag, June 29, 2007, 12:34:00 AM

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0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

snag

If money were no object what wood arrow shafts would you buy? POC, Footed, tapered?
Isaiah 49:2...he made me a polished arrow and concealed me in his quiver.

Danny Rowan

Hands down Sweetlands if they were still made, second choice would be Alaskan Forgewoods if they were still made.

Danny
"When shooting instinctivly,it matters not which eye is dominant"

Jay Kidwell and Glenn St. Charles

TGMM Family Of The Bow
NRA Life/Patron member
NAHC life member
Retired CPO US Navy 1972-1993
Retired USCBP Supervisory Officer 1999-2017

CoyoteBryceBowyer

Poplar shafts at 29",65#-70# 5.5" P&Y, or Shield Fletching....Bare Clear Coated Shaft, Red and White Fletchings with Red White and Black Cresting...
Give it Everything you have, Or Nothing At All!!!!!!!!!

Cutty47

Well, I'm kind of partial to Arrow Dynamics Trads with the factory nocks replaced by a milled adaptor so I can use G nocks.

I wish the AD Trads had the finish of the Carbon Express arrows, though.

NorthShoreLB

Wood, heavy, tapered, footed   :bigsmyl:    :bigsmyl:
"Almost none knows the keen sense of satisfaction which comes from taking game with their own homemade weapons"

-JAY MASSEY-

Voodoofire1

Well a "burned" tiger stripe hexshaft with  bloodwood footings would be my first choice
True happiness is not having what you want, it's wanting what you have!

Eric Krewson

Several years ago, when chundo shafting was still being made, Troy at Sticks and Feathers had the most perfect chundo shafts I have ever seen. They were straight, very tight grain with "0" runout, heavy and almost as durable as ash. I bought a bunch of these and still have several dozen left. I haven't seen shafts of this quality before or since and I have bought from all the major shaft suppliers.

Golden Hawk

If I was still shooting wood and could get any sahfts I wanted..... I would have to have some of Paula and Cecil's Rogue River tapered cedars. Best quality wood arrows I ever shot!
LeRoy

Charter member of TBJA (Trad Bow Junkies of America)

Tim Fishell

If I could get any wood shafts and money was not an object I would get some footed Tamarack shafts from Rusty's Feets.
Dreams can not be bought; they are free to those who have lived. -Mike Mitten

We must go beyond the textbooks, go out into the untrodden depths of the wilderness & travel & explore & tell the world the glories of our journey

TGMM Family of the Bow

snag

Anyone shoot Cedarsmith compressed cedar? I'm also thinking of trying some footed shafts. Anyone try Martin's footed shafts? Doesn't Raven's make them too?
Isaiah 49:2...he made me a polished arrow and concealed me in his quiver.

Shakes.602

FREE-ONES!!  :saywhat:    :notworthy:    :notworthy:    :notworthy:
"Carpe Cedar" Seize the Arrow!
"Life doesn't get Simpler; it gets Shorter and Turns in Smaller Circles." Dean Torges
"Faith is to Prayer what the Feather is to the Arrow" Thomas Morrow
"Ah Think They Should Outlaw Them Thar Crossbows" A Hunting Pal

**DONOTDELETE**

Shakes, I agree. Free is always best. I like the name of your new line of arrows too..."Frugal Fliers". Very catchy.

Shawn Leonard

Cedarsmiths compressed cedars are very nice, but if money were no object I would shoot some of the real high end carbons, but I am very happy with CE Heritage and carbonwoods as well! Shawn
Shawn

Longbeard

Ones that flew straight and true from any bow I shot and hit exactly where I wanted it to every time.  Soon as I find a dozen of those I'll have found it!

Fletcher

I'll go along with Danny on the Forgewoods.  I have a few that are 40 years old and still as straight as cans or carbons.  They are also heavy, tough and skinny; all great things for a good hunting arrow to be.     :archer:
Good judgement comes from experience.  Experience comes from bad judgement.

"The next best thing to playing and winning is playing and losing."

"An archer doesn't have to be a bowhunter, but a bowhunter should be an archer."

Ted Fry

Sweetlands by far. The best shaft (wood) ever made.

Orion

Yep.  I'd go with Sweetlands as well.  Still have a few.  Have shot Cedarsmith's compressed cedars for a long time as well.  They've very good shafts, but not as dense/heavy as Sweetlands.  Different manufacturing processes involved.

stump man

Bill Sweetlands "Battleshafts" get my vote also, that is if they were still
available today.  Bill has past on and  took his "Battleshafts" with him to
that happy hunting ground in the sky.  Bill was a very good personal friend
of mine whom I miss dearly. He taught me a lot about archery and life in
general.  Many stories could be told about the man, but since the subject of
his compressed cedars have been brought up here I think this is a good place
to let this one be told.
   Around 1990, give or take a few years, I ran across and old rotary dowler
that had been sitting behind a church on the otherside of town. It was in very
poor condition, it had no motor, no knives and was begining to rust very
badly, this is Oregon you know. Long story short I traded the gentleman in
possession a brand new custom made recurve bow for this broken down weary
machine. Many hours were spent totally dismantleing every nut, bolt, washer
spring etc. Got it all spit shined, re-painted and a new motor on her. I had
plenty of old planer blade stock to make knives from but I had no idea of the
shape and angle they should be ground to. So I give my old friend Bill a call
and we set a date two weeks down the road for a saturday in the shop in hopes
of bringing this thing back to life. He shows up and very meticiously looks
the machine over and states "you know I think this is one of my old dowlers!".
Wow!
  We spend the whole day shaping/ grinding knives and swaping stories.  Of
course the conversation at some point in the afternoon had to include some
history of his manufacturing days and techniques of his compressed cedars. I
asked him what ever happend to his old equipment? and how come it was not
still being used to make those famous compressed shafts everybody loved? Well,
he said," a couple young fellas up in Washington bought the machinery and
they never could figure out the process or how to run it". "They put it in
storage somewhere and as far as I know its still there". Woh! now I said!
let me get this straight?. You mean to tell me you sold these guy's all this
complicated machinery but didn't teach them how to run it?..His reply was
simple and so Bill, he said. "I would have been more than happy to...BUT THEY
DIDN'T ASK!!!" .. simple as that. They just didn't ask..

PS. We did get that dowler up and running that afternoon.

heydeerman


Rick McGowan

I'd have to go with the the Forgewood Battleshafts for woody's also. 100-105 spine!

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