first self made arrow!!!! :)

Started by DelawareDave, October 10, 2013, 09:00:00 PM

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DelawareDave

So here it is, not quit as glamorous as a beautiful self-bow, but I think im just as happy!  :)  Anyway here is my first self made arrow shaft.  Started with a 1/2" billet of white pine and after 3-4 hours of planning, sanding and sizing I have an 11/32" shaft!!!! And I couldn't be happier!!! Now for a few questions... when I test the spine do I put the weight on it so it pulls against the stronger or weaker side of the spine?  Also is there any way to increase or weaken the spine a little bit if need be?  thanks again to all you on trad gang I couldn't have done this with out u all!  Maybe for the the next dozen shafts I might even attempt a build along  :)



Sam Harper

That's awesome!  It sounds like you put a lot of work into perfecting it.

You should spine it  with the rings vertical, and spine it on both sides.  You should put the cock feather on so that when the arrow is put on the bow, it will bend around the handle in the direction of the strongest spine.  Not sure if I'm explaining that clearly.

Yes, you can weaken the spine by sanding a little in the middle of the arrow.  That's a good way to get your arrows matched.  Sanding in the middle reduces the spine without giving up too much weight.

You can't add stiffness, but you can add effective stiffness by making the arrow shorter or by using a light weight tip.  The will cause the arrow to behave as if it had a stiffer spine when you shoot it.  It's called dynamic spine.
There are strange things done in the midnight sun by the men who moil for gold.

DelawareDave

Yes I've probably put a little toooo much time into perfecting that shaft, the whole thing is with in about .010" diameter. its the machinist showing through in me  :)  anyway thanks for
Answering my question!

Roy from Pa

It looks very nice, but I wouldn't expect white pine to make a very stiff arrow. Let us know how it turns out.

DelawareDave

Roy I was actually looking for a light spined arrow. I have a bow thats lighter weight.  For my heavier bows I have Douglas fur and poplar that I plan on trying next  :)   does anyone know with poplar, if im looking for a 45-50 lbs spine should that be a 5/16 or 11/32" shaft???

Roy from Pa

I would go for 11/32 for poplar. You will love the Douglas fir.

Mark Smeltzer

I spine my arrows a little different than Sam. I rotate and test them in the spine tester and find the spine that is closest to what I want and that determines the orientation of the cock feather and nock.

Mark

DelawareDave

Roy I was actually looking for a light spined arrow. I have a bow thats lighter weight.  For my heavier bows I have Douglas fur and poplar that I plan on trying next  :)   does anyone know with poplar, if im looking for a 45-50 lbs spine should that be a 5/16 or 11/32" shaft???

DelawareDave

Sorry for the double post there still learning how things work on my phone  :)

Sam Harper

QuoteOriginally posted by DelawareDave:
Roy I was actually looking for a light spined arrow. I have a bow thats lighter weight.  For my heavier bows I have Douglas fur and poplar that I plan on trying next   :)    does anyone know with poplar, if im looking for a 45-50 lbs spine should that be a 5/16 or 11/32" shaft???
Why not just sand it until you get the spine you want regardless of what diameter that happens to be instead of shooting for a diameter and hoping, by luck, that it'll end up at the spine you want?
There are strange things done in the midnight sun by the men who moil for gold.

DelawareDave

Thats a really good idea!!! I think I will  :)  as long as the very ends are the right diameter for my points and knocks the center really doesn't matter  :)

George Tsoukalas

When hand planing barrel tapering allows one to control grain and spine. There's info on my site so I won't repeat myself here. Jawge
http://georgeandjoni.home.comcast.net/~georgeandjoni/index.html

George Tsoukalas

One more thing. I've found that the tighter, straighter  the  rings  the more the spine. Jawge

DelawareDave

A little update date, I completed one arrow, just to try it out  :)   I shot it about 50 times and it worked great and best off it didn't blow up in my face!  But it does have a little to much spine. The rings on the pine board I used did not have that tight of grain but very straight. When I first tested the spines after first sanding they were about 70 lbs!  After a lot of sanding I got them down to 62lbs.... could of used to loose another ten pounds for my 42lbs bow  :)  I might have to start making them a little smaller then 11/32 or at less in the middle of the spine. Sam: I read your arrow build along and I saw u had trouble with the DF from home depot, cant say I had the same experiance, these shafts seem to be tough as $&#! I missed the target twice and hit rocks in my driveway and no damage to the arrow.  :)  any more advice, or constructive criticism would be great!


Sam Harper

My advice is go for it.  It looks like your one arrow turned out great, so make six or twelve of them.  Good luck!
There are strange things done in the midnight sun by the men who moil for gold.

onemississipp

I have found popular to spine about 57#..this of course depends on the wood. Every tree is different.
Dustin
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DelawareDave

Thanks Dustin!  With the popular do u all use the yellow heart wood or the lighter sap wood?

Roy from Pa

I'm surprised you got 70 pounds out of white pine. I always thought it was a weaker wood. The arrow looks great.. I tried poplar once and they came out at 30 pound spine. But I suppose every piece of wood is different.

DelawareDave

Roy:  I've made about 6 or 7 arrows from the same 2x8 that I picked up at Lowe's, and from the same piece of wood ive got spines all the way from 70lbs. To as low as 32lbs.... so much for consistency  :)

T Callahan

you made that from wood from lowes? very nice   :notworthy:

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