I tried both your method and I tried laying it on a table and picking up one end and pressing on the belly of the shaft quite heavily and I even tried heating the cedar shaft with the stove and it still doesn't bend back. These are ones I bought from you at 3 Rivers Archery and I really wish you guys sold me straight shafts so I didn't have to figure out while cresting them that all of my shafts were bent. It took me 2 days to figure out why the arrow was wobbling in the drill lathe.
Yes. We ship worldwide. Shafts and field tips are typically no problem. However, some of our flammable items (stains, paints, adhesives) can't be shipped overseas.
You can buy shafts from 3Rivers Archery. We offer a variety of woods (Port Orford Cedar, Sitka Spruce, Laminated Birch), and you can buy them by the dozens or hundreds.
"How can I know the approximate or actual weight/force tolerance (as in draw weight)?"
That's the hard part. There are tools to measure these things. Some folks just make up arrows then shoot them to see where they hit and use the one that hit where they're looking.
It's much easier in the beginning to just buy pre-spined arrows for a particular bow than trying to make them from hardware store dowels or shoots found in the woods. todd smith
On cedar arrows you can, but as the wood gets harder (like ash or hickory) you'll need to use heat such as the hot plate of the kitchen stove. The same hand-straightening principles apply once you've heated it enough.
I tried both your method and I tried laying it on a table and picking up one end and pressing on the belly of the shaft quite heavily and I even tried heating the cedar shaft with the stove and it still doesn't bend back. These are ones I bought from you at 3 Rivers Archery and I really wish you guys sold me straight shafts so I didn't have to figure out while cresting them that all of my shafts were bent. It took me 2 days to figure out why the arrow was wobbling in the drill lathe.
FingerprintDiVA 2 weeks ago
I am new to archery and i want to make my own wooden arrows but i was confused about things like spines and diameters can you help me
I shoot a 26 pound longbow my draw length is 28 inches.
can you tell me what diameter and spine i should use couse i want to get some arrow shafts and feild tips from your site and make my own fletchings.
Please reply to this asap.
iscay666 2 years ago
For the bow you are shooting, we recommend a 5/16 diameter, 30-35 spine shaft.
3RiversArchery 2 years ago
Awsome thanks and also do you ship shafts and feild tips to australia?
iscay666 2 years ago
Yes. We ship worldwide. Shafts and field tips are typically no problem. However, some of our flammable items (stains, paints, adhesives) can't be shipped overseas.
3RiversArchery 2 years ago
Where do you get packs of shafts like that guy please reply
ResidentEvilGuy50 3 years ago
You can buy shafts from 3Rivers Archery. We offer a variety of woods (Port Orford Cedar, Sitka Spruce, Laminated Birch), and you can buy them by the dozens or hundreds.
3RiversArchery 3 years ago
wow, I just think that is amazing.
What would qualify a would shaft for it to be used in an arrow?
How can I know the approximate or actual weight/force tolerance (as in draw weight)?
consistentbass 4 years ago
"How can I know the approximate or actual weight/force tolerance (as in draw weight)?"
That's the hard part. There are tools to measure these things. Some folks just make up arrows then shoot them to see where they hit and use the one that hit where they're looking.
It's much easier in the beginning to just buy pre-spined arrows for a particular bow than trying to make them from hardware store dowels or shoots found in the woods. todd smith
3RiversArchery 4 years ago
thank you so much.
I had tried the hardware store dowels, I won't lie, for a 30lb bow, but for heavier bows I wasn't so sure it was a safe thing to do.
Though, I did have some trouble straightening them. I attribute such trouble to my inexperience so far.
consistentbass 4 years ago
Are you telling me you can straighten a wooden shaft just with the force of the hand without heat or anything else? !!
consistentbass 4 years ago
Yes you can.
3RiversArchery 4 years ago
On cedar arrows you can, but as the wood gets harder (like ash or hickory) you'll need to use heat such as the hot plate of the kitchen stove. The same hand-straightening principles apply once you've heated it enough.
squishybrain 4 years ago
Rolling the shaft on a table is the quickest! that glass top is perfect! Nice video!
Chris aka Longbowace
longbowace 4 years ago