Super easy to find a spine that works for your bow. If you like a heavy hunting arrow, you have a head start in building it because you can get shafts with more grains per inch. Penetration is better as well.
Super easy to find a spine that works for your bow. If you like a heavy hunting arrow, you have a head start in building it because you can get shafts with more grains per inch. Penetration is better as well.
X2 all of this. In particular they have always been easy for me to tune to my bow, just cut off length, add heavy or lighter point, etc.
Aluminum has it's positive attributes but not enough for me to go back to either.
Now I may try the hybrids like Bisch is shooting but I have about 50 bent and dented aluminum arrows from decades past that I'll never straighten or reuse.
Carbon stays straight and takes more abuse.
Aluminum has it's positive attributes but not enough for me to go back to either.
Now I may try the hybrids like Bisch is shooting but I have about 50 bent and dented aluminum arrows from decades past that I'll never straighten or reuse.
Carbon stays straight and takes more abuse.
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Carbon just doesn’t have the weight when you draw 31 and pull 50plus it’s hard to get there with carbons. I like 10gpp I can do it with carbons just harder and limits my broad heads
Carbon just doesn’t have the weight when you draw 31 and pull 50plus it’s hard to get there with carbons. I like 10gpp I can do it with carbons just harder and limits my broad heads
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At 27.5" I don't have that issue.[emoji23][emoji1787][emoji23]
Aluminum has it's positive attributes but not enough for me to go back to either.
Now I may try the hybrids like Bisch is shooting but I have about 50 bent and dented aluminum arrows from decades past that I'll never straighten or reuse.
Carbon stays straight and takes more abuse.
Sent from my SM-G892A using Tapatalk
This. Aluminum has its pros, but the big con to me is they will bend. I’m OK with straight up breaking an arrow and trashing it rather than maybe having a bent arrow if I’m not diligent in spinning my shafts often.
I have been tiptoeing into the FMJ shafts. I've carried them on hunts for several years now and recently picked up another half dozen for practice. They are so expensive that my frugal self may never fully make the switch. I keep three in my practice quiver along with five Gold Tips. The Gold Tips cost about half of what the FMJs cost. They group together despite a slight difference in spine. The Gold Tips are easier to get a good grip on when pulling arrows. That slick aluminum is hard on my arthritic hands.
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