I use jojan fletchers, 6 up, they take some finesse, but they work. I have one for right wing and one for left wing, both set at the same pitch. With mine, I like to put a bit angle on the helical, they put the hen feather straight down with 3 fletch left wings for a right hand bow and with right wings for a left hand bow. With ASLs I like to angle the high part of the bottom hen feather into the corner. So before I glue on feathers, I turn the unglued nock 1/8 turn counterclockwise and tack the nock with a dab of hot melt on the edge, not in. For right wing with a left hand bow I do the same clockwise. Then after the feathers are glued on, I rotate the arrow that same 1/8 turn to the shaft, this move turns what would be a vertical hen feather into the bow and realigns the nock to the shaft grain. With four inch four fletch i find that right wing naturally aligns with a right hand bow and left wing naturally aligns to a left hand bow, so I leave those as they are. If nothing else you can slap together a dozen new arrows and transfer the broad heads. then put corrected nocks on the arrows you have and put blunts or judos on them. It is no secret, my favorite arrows are always blunts, those are the ones that i have the most fun with, I absolutely love small game hunting. Last year I found the the 3 rivers hammers will do exactly that to a pheasant, bang and they are down.