First off this is my first thread so I hope it's in the right place. Forgive me if it isn't.
Got a strange inquiry about "older" wooden shafts. A few months ago I took a risk and bought about 400 raw wooden shafts from someone who had no idea what they had. Since I had no idea what i was getting until they got here I think we both made out. Anyways, the shafts were owned by this person's late grandfather. They are a mix of a few different woods but about 80% are POC with the rest being a mix of fir and sitka spruce. So recently I've had a little bit of time to actually organize the majority of them into spine and weight groups. I'm using a homemade spine tester on 26" center that has given good results so far and a DIllon digital reloading scale with a modified v-block as a rest for the arrows. My question is this. The majority of the POC shafts seem to be in the neighborhood of 15-25 years old given the style of the Rose City Archery label that was in the box. I don't necessarily think they all came from ROse City but I'm sure a few did. The previous owner had marked about one half to two thirds of the shafts with spine and grain weight. Now, the spine measurements I'm getting are fairly close (between 2 and 5 pounds with a few exceptions) to what was originally written on the shafts but, the grain weights have lightened considerably. In some cases the shafts have fluctuated 35 grains. Now I know wood dries out over time but, I also think that it homogenizes with it's surrounding humidity. These shafts were originally somewhere in Wisconsin then moved to Florida and now are residing in Va. I've heard that wooden shafts need to maintain a certain level of moisture to be straightened and to retain their flexibility when shot. Do you think that these are "safe" to shoot regularly. Or do you think that "our" scales are more precise these days and I am worrying about nothing. I've made several single arrows from the batch and as of yet have had no problems but, many of the shafts are spined in the 90-100 lb. range and that's a giant leap from the 40-60s that I've made so far. Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Joe.