wildernessmaster
Lil-Rokslider
Just wanted to pass this along...
I am building some arrows with Easton Axis 5mm (.001s). When I first cut them I cut them by hand with one of those harbor freight small chop saws. I noticed some noticeable variance in length (probably max 1/4"). I am trying to be meticulous, so I weighed out all of my arrrows, inserts, and vanes and put the weights into Excel.
I then ordered the arrows lightest to heaviest, and then took each component (insert, each vane) and ordered them heaviest to lightest. The goal being to get a bunch of "complete" arrows as close to same weight.
When I did I got:
Avg: 467.11
Diff: .9
S Avg: 466.92 (bottom 6 lightest arrow average)
L Avg: 467.30 (top 6 heaviest arrow average)
Deviation: .25
Variance: .06
After looking at my arrows for a few weeks (just cut nothing actually built yet) over Cmas, I decided to spring for a Weston saw to cut my arrows closer to the same. It came in a week or so ago. Tonight I just recut them, slightly below the smallest arrow. When I put them on a flat surface the lengths are dead same.
But here is the interesting thing... Here is what I got when I did the same with them:
Avg: 466.04
Diff: 1.4
S Avg: 465.75
L Avg: 466.33
Deviation: .40
Variance: .16
That kind of blew my mind... Basically:
1. My not perfect hand cuts produced a tighter set overall set of arrows (by weight).
2. Arrows cut to near perfect same sized lengths produced more variance.
I found this interesting.
I am building some arrows with Easton Axis 5mm (.001s). When I first cut them I cut them by hand with one of those harbor freight small chop saws. I noticed some noticeable variance in length (probably max 1/4"). I am trying to be meticulous, so I weighed out all of my arrrows, inserts, and vanes and put the weights into Excel.
I then ordered the arrows lightest to heaviest, and then took each component (insert, each vane) and ordered them heaviest to lightest. The goal being to get a bunch of "complete" arrows as close to same weight.
When I did I got:
Avg: 467.11
Diff: .9
S Avg: 466.92 (bottom 6 lightest arrow average)
L Avg: 467.30 (top 6 heaviest arrow average)
Deviation: .25
Variance: .06
After looking at my arrows for a few weeks (just cut nothing actually built yet) over Cmas, I decided to spring for a Weston saw to cut my arrows closer to the same. It came in a week or so ago. Tonight I just recut them, slightly below the smallest arrow. When I put them on a flat surface the lengths are dead same.
But here is the interesting thing... Here is what I got when I did the same with them:
Avg: 466.04
Diff: 1.4
S Avg: 465.75
L Avg: 466.33
Deviation: .40
Variance: .16
That kind of blew my mind... Basically:
1. My not perfect hand cuts produced a tighter set overall set of arrows (by weight).
2. Arrows cut to near perfect same sized lengths produced more variance.
I found this interesting.