Another little trick is to glue nocks on after you fletch, so you can line up the fletching for maximum clearnance off the shelf. You can fletch alright by just pushing the nock on the taper and installing the shaft in the jig, just pay attention to it.
If your going to cap the shaft, measure then mark it with a pencil, stain up to the cap mark, then cap from the mark up to the nock end. Stains will bleed through the cap paint. If you dip the cap, you should taper after dipping, so as not to have a build up of paint on you nock taper and your gluing the nock to the wood.
I straighten shafts, taper nock ends, stain shafts, I have been stainning the caps too, crest, seal, fletch, glue nocks, cut to length, taper point and glue them on.
Make sure what ever your using for stains, paints, glues, etc. that they are all compatible to one another, or you'll have a mess on your hands. You can't put water based finishes over lacquers, but you can do the opposite. Some fletch cements won't work on some finishes either.
I have been experimenting with water based stains and paint markers, then clear coat with spray on lacquer and fletching with fletchtite cement.
I do like the water based stains though, for the shaft and caps. They let the grain show through and actually look pretty decent. I'm going to try some other based stains on the next batch and see how they do.
I also weigh and spine my shafts before hand, then letter them on the point end of the shaft, a , b , c , etc. then log them in my notebook of what letter shaft was what weight and what spine. Then when I'm finished, I'll write that letter on the back side of the shaft between the fletching, as a refference. Comes in handy sometimes.
The thing about all the Bohnning products, is you have to order them and there's a lot of other things you have to have and do to use them, plus the price. there are other alternitives to use, you just have to search them out. Bohnning makes a dang good product and it does a terrific job with a durrable finish, the only problem is, there just not handy, unless you have a Traditional store in your neighborhood.
I'm not an expert by no means, these are just a few things I've learned and am experimenting with. That's part of the fun in making your own arrows.
Have fun, but pay attention and take a few notes, for the next batch.
Jerald