Do you shoot right or left fletch?

Do you shoot right or left fletch?

  • Right

    Votes: 62 60.8%
  • Left

    Votes: 38 37.3%
  • Straight

    Votes: 2 2.0%
  • Don't know

    Votes: 1 1.0%

  • Total voters
    102

xcutter

WKR
Joined
Aug 22, 2014
Messages
1,408
Location
Connersville, IN
I always put a mark on an unfletched arrow and shoot at 5 yards and see which direction the arrow naturally wants to rotate. Every bow I've ever shot the arrows rotate left so I fletch arrows with a left offset of 1 to 2 degrees. I'm a RH shooter.
 

TheTone

WKR
Joined
Mar 4, 2012
Messages
1,817
Right, mainly because the first arrows I ever bought were right and I’ve stuck with it. Never messed around trying differently
 

GatorGar247

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 18, 2020
Messages
169
I shoot left because my bow clocks left.. no reason to fight it.. It might not matter but I've watched slo mo video of the arrow changing direction because it starts left and is fletched right..
 

LostArra

WKR
Joined
May 9, 2013
Messages
3,724
Location
Oklahoma
I shoot feathers and back when I first started fletching my arrows for longbow and recurve it was tough to find right wing feathers so my Bitz jig set up and all my feathers are LW. Just never changed.

Someone told me that turkey farms clipped the right wing feathers so after slaughter there were a bunch of left wing feathers for archery use. Since beer was involved in this discussion I cannot take it as truth.
 
Joined
Feb 13, 2019
Messages
486
I have yet to see proof that either way makes a difference, no matter how your arrow is clocking off the string.

I shoot right but I guess I would shoot left as well if I wanted.

To me it’s more of a solution in search of a problem. I’m pretty exact with my arrow set ups and my tune but, I just can’t see how this would help or hurt.

I will say I use to shoot left offset, didn’t even know what that was at that point in my archery knowledge, and my field points would loosen much quicker and it was a bit annoying.


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Joined
Feb 24, 2012
Messages
4,980
Location
Colorado
I have yet to see proof that either way makes a difference, no matter how your arrow is clocking off the string.

I shoot right but I guess I would shoot left as well if I wanted.

To me it’s more of a solution in search of a problem. I’m pretty exact with my arrow set ups and my tune but, I just can’t see how this would help or hurt.

I will say I use to shoot left offset, didn’t even know what that was at that point in my archery knowledge, and my field points would loosen much quicker and it was a bit annoying.


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Yea I’m not sure it makes a huge difference on accuracy to fletch with with your natural arrow spin.. but if you think about it. It might. If the arrow wants to spin a certain way and you allow it to verse fight it and make it spin the other way. Accuracy might be a hair better
 

MadMarkie

FNG
Joined
Oct 5, 2018
Messages
96
Location
Tucson
Bare shafts from my bow spin CCW, so I picked a Left helical MiniMax when I bought it a few weeks back. I don't notice any difference between the reworked arrows and the Right twist Blazers that were on them, but it made sense to go Left since I was getting a jig anyhow.
 

MadMarkie

FNG
Joined
Oct 5, 2018
Messages
96
Location
Tucson
This video helped convince me... the slow motion actually catches the arrow starting to spin one way then switching.... seems inefficient to me.
 
Joined
Jun 21, 2019
Messages
2,580
Location
Missouri
This video helped convince me... the slow motion actually catches the arrow starting to spin one way then switching.... seems inefficient to me.
Rotation reversal definitely can happen. Here's another video demonstrating it:

The question is, does it matter? My opinion is that fletching direction relative to natural rotation direction has negligible practical effect.

FWIW, John Stallone did some testing that showed a minor increase in downrange speed (2-5 fps at 80 yds) when his arrow was fletched to complement natural rotation (left/CCW in his case).
Screenshot_20210723-082357_2.png
 
Joined
Feb 13, 2019
Messages
486
Yea I’m not sure it makes a huge difference on accuracy to fletch with with your natural arrow spin.. but if you think about it. It might. If the arrow wants to spin a certain way and you allow it to verse fight it and make it spin the other way. Accuracy might be a hair better

I would say while it might have some minor effects but it would be so insignificant that even a hooter shooter wouldn’t be able to pick up the difference at any distance.

Edit: is see above that speed had a slight variance between the two. I would like to see that repeated inside without wind, etc. to see if the results are the same.


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Sonoman

FNG
Joined
Sep 22, 2021
Messages
57
I've been fletching right since day one. I also switched to feathers a few years ago. Like the way they perform for me.
 
Joined
Nov 25, 2016
Messages
3,721
Location
Utah
On all my target bows I clock the arrows and follow that rotation for fletching, which is always left hand rotation. I especially want my indoor Vegas vanes set up to go to work quickly so I I almost always fletch left. I shoot Mathews for comps and Pse for hunting. My indoor 3 spot and 5 spot comp bows are all a strong helical left. My indoor 3D is a a generous left off set-3 degrees I guess.

My hunt set up is always right fletch, 2 degree offset. Just so nothing twists out in target. I use offset to maintain as much speed as possible down range.
 
Joined
May 6, 2018
Messages
9,850
Location
Shenandoah Valley
I'm still wondering, if the point to fletching is to create drag on the end of the arrow, wouldn't we be better to fletch counter to the way the arrow wants to rotate?


I mean, ideally the fletching is there to fix our screw ups, that's why we tune with bareshafts. So the idea is that drag fixes our screw ups.


Wouldn't counter to the natural rotation produce more drag at launch? Correcting the arrow?


I fletch for the direction my arrow spins, but this is something I have been pondering.


I think it's something that would show up less with a shooting machine, more with an actual shooter that can have flaws.

It's like using a heavier helical.


Not saying I'm right, just thoughts for pondering.
 
Joined
Feb 24, 2012
Messages
4,980
Location
Colorado
I'm still wondering, if the point to fletching is to create drag on the end of the arrow, wouldn't we be better to fletch counter to the way the arrow wants to rotate?


I mean, ideally the fletching is there to fix our screw ups, that's why we tune with bareshafts. So the idea is that drag fixes our screw ups.


Wouldn't counter to the natural rotation produce more drag at launch? Correcting the arrow?


I fletch for the direction my arrow spins, but this is something I have been pondering.


I think it's something that would show up less with a shooting machine, more with an actual shooter that can have flaws.

It's like using a heavier helical.


Not saying I'm right, just thoughts for pondering.
That’s interesting thought. I wonder
 
Joined
Feb 13, 2019
Messages
486
I saw a post on archery talk the other day where a guy shot left, right and straight fletchings. His arrow clocked left naturally. Order of accuracy for him was 1. Right 2. Straight 3. Left

Obviously, there is human error involved but interesting results for him. Might be something to try and repeat.

If I were to do this experiment I would use my set up with my broadheads just to see the results as that is ultimately going to show the most forgiving set up imo.


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