I was reading through the thread on the "perfect arrow" and looking at the bent brass insert. I don't see any trace of epoxy on the insert. Either this is a "staged" picture just for demonstratiion purposes, or that was a lousy epoxy bond between the shaft and the insert.
I use a German epoxy, UHU glue, in my knife making. I have only seen the UHU here in the States as a glue stick similar to the glue on sticky notes. They do make a heat setting epoxy, however, of the slow curing variety. Working time is up to 2 hours and 24 hour setting time at room temperature. As the temp is increased, however the curing time decreases and the tensile strength increases. At 400 degrees F, it cures in 10 minutes and has triple the strength of room temp cured epoxy.
I usually cure my knife handles at 170 degrees F unless it is a sensitive handle material such as ivory. If it's something really tough, like Micarta, I run it up to 250 - 300 degrees F.
On a few occasions, I have had to(wanted to?) remove the handle scales. I can grind the scales down to the epoxy and I still can't peel that epoxy skin off the steel with a sharp chisel. I have to grind it right down to the bare steel.
Hence my question - how much heat can a carbon shaft stand without weakening it? If it can tolerate 170 decrees F (which is as low as my oven will go), I guarantee I can epoxy an insert into the shaft that will NOT separate from the shaft even when it is bent.