I've been shooting nothing but wooden arrows for some years now, and thought I understood wooden shafts pretty well, but I had an interesting thing happen this afternoon.
Just making up a new set of woodies and I thought I'd check the tune with a bare shaft from the new lot. All shooting was done at 15 yards in my shearing shed (no wind) into a new big round hay bale.
The new arrow shafts are the same wood as the old set, Douglas Fir, same spine, 73-75#, same length, 29.5", same point weight, 160 grains, yet the new shafts bare shaft noticeably weak. Too much nock left.
Strange I thought, so I stripped the feathers off one of my old set and bare shafted that. Just ever so slightly weak, perfect, exactly how I'd want a bare shaft.
Tried them both side by side numerous times with exactly the same results, the new shaft was noticeably weaker.
So I checked both bare shafts on my Ace Spin-Spine Tester, both 73#.
I weighed them, the new one is 30 grains heavier.
I measured the diameters, the new ones are on average 10 thou thinner.
Anyone else experienced anything similar?
If I have to trim a little more off the new set thats ok, I've got a bit of wriggle room. I'm not concerned about it, I'll simply tune them to what they need, I just found it interesting.
Time permitting, tomorrow I might bare shaft a couple of others out of the new batch and see if it's just that particular shaft. It might end up as a flu-flu.
Best
Lex