I shot aluminum arrows as a kid. No real problem with them. Maybe not the best for a back quicker or any side quiver where they'd rattle around? For toughness carbon always wins so there's no real sense in worrying about wood or aluminum durability. You will bend or break either of the two. I'm not a wealthy man, but I have accepted that my wood arrows will be broke. Or I'll have a wonky one here and there that goes into the stumping-arrow bin.
The "pro's" of wood arrows are contentious and debatable. Everything I say about them can and has been refuted and argued aside from just personal opinion.
- I can tune wood arrows very easily. I imagine I could aluminum too, just haven't tried.
- I shoot long bows and they seem to want wood arrows.
- They're quiet in the woods. Either in my back quiver, taking them out, putting them in, bumping them on the riser, etc. they're just quiet.
- Douglas fir is a great arrow wood. When done right, they stay straight a long time, and are very durable.
- I can get a heavy arrow pretty easy without a crazy amount of tip weight. 160 grain tips is about my limit and the arrows hit hard.
- sometimes the weather sucks. Or its dark and I can't shoot. Tinkering with my arrows is relaxing and fun (to me). They each develop their own personality, (im not a weirdo I swear).
- This last one...take with a grain of salt; it is entirely my opinion: I shoot a traditional bow. I shoot a long bow. I enjoy the challenge, the nostalgia, the effort, the limits. To back out when it comes to my arrow seems wrong. How could I explain to some wheelie shooter what I love about traditional archery just to shoot a carbon or aluminum arrow? The argument for one is the same argument for another. Again, that's just ME.