haven't posted anything in a long time...but I'm still here and kicking.
I had been am instinctive aimer for all of my trad life....last January I decided I wanted to try to convert to gapping with a fixed crawl to extend my range a bit. It was a struggle and I, being very bull headed, probably stuck with it too long, and got to the point were I couldn't hit the broad side of a barn. I ended up damaging a bunch of GT Trad Carbons and some old Carbonwood Vapor arrows by hitting hard stuff and driving the insert back into the end of the shaft. I end up tossing those shafts in a corner, hanging up the bow for 3 months.
in the summer I decided to pick it back up and start from square one, back at 3 under instinctive....and got right back on track with where I had been. Hunted all season like that. but still had that pile of splintered carbons in the corner. as I was moving stuff around in the garage and old arrow bock nearly fell on my head, and it was full of old easton aluminum shafts. got to looking at them and *bing* wonder if any of these would be the right size for footing my carbons. pulled up the old chart here on TG and found that 2219s were the right size for my GT Trad 5575s. Found a couple 2219s among the box and pulled out my arrowmaking tackle. cut up a bunch or 2" sections of 2219 and chucked them in a drill and chamfered them on my sander. most of the damaged carbons on close inspection were only split about 3/4" down the shaft so i cut off and inch from each, knocked out the old insert remnants, and sanded the ends to get a good bond. used hot melt to install one footing and a new insert, let it cool and then test fired the shaft with my regular arrows and surprise surprise...it flew right with them (I was concerned about shortening the shaft too much and throwing off the dynamic spine. Since it flew fine and the footing and insert seemed pretty solid, I did up the rest with hot melt (I'd always used JB weld with my carbons).
shot them a bunch and they are great. Nice to not have to throw away all these shafts. I know its probably not the safest thing, but feel that the footing should be holding any latent fractures together.