3Rivers Archery




The Trad Gang Digital Market














Contribute to Trad Gang and Access the Classifieds!

Become a Trad Gang Sponsor!

Traditional Archery for Bowhunters




RIGHT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS

LEFT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS

TRAD GANG CLASSIFIEDS ACCESS


wooden shaft length/diameter questions

Started by poekoelan, April 17, 2007, 02:38:00 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

poekoelan

Why is it that most commercial wooden arrow shafts only come in lengths 32"??

Also, why is it that the biggest diameter is 23/64"?

Those of us who use dowels for arrows know that the smallest length we can buy is 36" and the only diameters we can buy are 5/16 and 3/8. Some of us have to buy 3/8 and do extra work to get arrows in the 60 to 75 spine range.

I'll occasionally hear a guy say that he can't get the length or the spine he wants in wood. If this guy used dowels for arrows he wouldn't have any problem getting the spine or the length he wants. If the wooden dowel industry can provide this, how come the wooden arrow shaft industry can't??

Just something I pondered lately.

KodiakBob

How long do you need? Try Wapiti's website for shaft info.

poekoelan

I don't need any. I was just wondering why this is.

aromakr

poeloelan:
I been in the arrow business for over fifteen years and can count on one hand the orders I've had for arrows over 31" long. longer shafts = more material= higher cost to the consumer. as far as diameter is concerned 3/8 shafts will spine quite high, the average bow weight is between 45/55# no need making a product there is little market for. I can remember in the mid 50's when 3/8" shafts were made, very few sold. Those using bows 70# and above with 30" draws maybe, but not a big market.
Bob
Man must "believe" in something!  I "believe" I will go hunting-----

pdubya

I bought some 3/8 chinese birch dowels ( I think ) cut to 29 1/2" and hand planed the nock end 10" and then chucked into drill and sanded to 5/16. Did the same to the point to 11/32. Put on .38 shells as blunts and they weigh about 595 grains. No idea about spine but seem to shoot so much better than aluminum which was all I had. Bows are self bows and one recurve all at 45#. Any way to guess spine without tester?

WESTBROOK

What length could you make shafts to sell as "dowels" and not as "arrow shafts" and avoid the exise tax?

Eric

SCATTERSHOT

pdubya,you can get the spine for an aluminum shaft that you have from Foxfire Archery website, then affix one end to the wall and hang a weight on the other end. Measure how it bends, and then do the same with a dowel. If it bends more, it's weaker. If it bends less, it's stiffer.

That's only ballpark, but it works.
"Experience is a series of non - fatal mistakes."

Contact Us | Trad Gang.com © | User Agreement

Copyright 2003 thru 2025 ~ Trad Gang.com ©