Hey Guys,
Following my post about our exciting cow patty hunt, several folks were wondering about the way we foot our wood arrow shafts with alum. arrow material.
I apologize for the delay, but have had the creeping crud and missed a few days of work on account of it. Now that both cheeks are sore from injections, and I have met the medical insurance deductible for the year I am back in the saddle (gingerly...) and have some explanations and some photos showing what we do.
To be honest, this process was born out of laziness, rather than any scientific desire for ExFOC or anything. It was simply annoying to me to have to heat-up hot melt and swap out points on arrows. I never seemed to have the right points on the particular arrows I wanted to use for whatever purpose. The adapters you could purchase were a little pricey for me and weighed quite a bit, and to me seemed clunky and inelegant. So I looked for a way to get what I wanted with what I already had. Here is what a few buddies and I have come up with.
Here are some of the materials you will need:
The tubing cutter is to trim the sections of alum. arrow to size. A high speed cutoff saw would be better and eliminate a few steps, but I don't have one. I did have the cutter. The protractor (or any ruler or measuring tape) is to measure your sections and along the arrow shaft. Pen or pencil for marking, and the small hammer and tapered punch for resizing and deburring the sections.
I prefer to put these footings on finished arrow shafts. It gets cumbersome to try and clear coat dip the shafts with the footing on. Make sure the arrows are shootable straight. Trying to straighten a footing on a crooked arrow is difficult at best and an exercise in futility at worst. You will also need alum. arrow shafting sized to snuggly fit over your wood shaft. A too loose fit results in misaligned footings which amount to a permanently crooked arrow. I don't know about you, but my shooting doesn't need any help in the WORSE direction. Of course, you will also need inserts that fit the shafting. All the shafting I used was scavenged from my own junk arrow pile or from my buddies’ arrow graveyards. I only had to buy a couple of handfuls of inserts to round out my supplies. Even if you needed to purchase alum. arrows, one shaft (depending on how long you make your sections) can yield a dozen or so sections if you’re not picky about labeling and such.
Figure out how far up the wood shaft you want the footing to go. These are some arrows that my girl friend Lisa made. Since they are smaller dia. shafts I am using Easton 2314 alum. shaft. Most of my wood shafts need 2413 alum. section (yes, confusing with the transposed number thing). She decided on an inch and a half, add to that the three-quarters of an inch the insert will take up and you get two and one-quarter inch sections of alum. arrow shafting.
Mark your sections and cut one at a time to avoid compounding measuring errors.
When cutting the alum. arrow sections with the tubing cutter, try and avoid deforming the shafting. Again, a high speed cutoff saw would be best for this. I even considered asking the folks at my local archery shop to do this for me (and they would for free most likely, they are mostly wheel bow shooters but get great entertainment value from me and my kooky ideas) but could never think of it during business hours.
Get the cutting wheel on the line you marked and make sure the first turn cuts well, otherwise it likes to walk and the cut will not be clean.