This makes a lot of sense. I may have to start doing that myself. As of now I have practice arrows and hunting arrows. Of course Ill shoot the hunting arrows with broadheads to make sure they are flying right, but I don't want to accidentally damage a shaft and have it break on my in the woods if I didn't catch it.if I get a dozen new arrows I number them, spin them and set aside all the ones that spin true and the insert is nice and square, and make a note of those numbers in my phone. Confirm they all fly true with field points, and then I’ll set aside six of those for my hunting arrows. I’ll later confirm those all fly true with a broadhead as well. I then have a quiver full of arrows for hunting that I’m not gonna lose/break practicing.
If I need to replace a hunting arrow I look at my note and grab one of the “good” numbered arrows from the practice pile and stick it in the quiver. I can go back to an older batch if I have to (same arrow setup).
Using the "standard" RIP (not TKO) would bring the cost down some and keep your gpi the same. Looks like bare RIP's run around $9-13 each (depending on straightness tolerance) vs. $15-18 for RIP TKO's.I've been tossing the idea around of making a set of more economic practice arrows and and a set of hunting. My hunting arrow is a 300 rip tko with their 50 grain insert. Does anyone have any recommendations on a more affordable shaft that similar?
This…I just parrafin or Goop the ends so the targets dont eat up the carbonI wouldn't hunt with any arrow I hadn't practiced with and confirmed to hit where I aim with a broadhead on the front.
I’ve been setting up some Linkboys and Accmos shafts. Good defection and consistent spine. Most noks for those are garbage- too weak, you have to get the goodones.I've been tossing the idea around of making a set of more economic practice arrows and and a set of hunting. My hunting arrow is a 300 rip tko with their 50 grain insert. Does anyone have any recommendations on a more affordable shaft that similar?
The Rips look great, I was also checking out GT velocity, for $6.67 a shaft on Lancaster. Same gpi but not sure what inserts they come with.Using the "standard" RIP (not TKO) would bring the cost down some and keep your gpi the same. Looks like bare RIP's run around $9-13 each (depending on straightness tolerance) vs. $15-18 for RIP TKO's.
I have done almost identical for years. Numbering is key. I also do broadhead spin test when I load up fresh braodheads on the arrows I've confirmed fly tru with the practice heads. This double checks the new heads so I am confident that the arrow and the new head are tru.if I get a dozen new arrows I number them, spin them and set aside all the ones that spin true and the insert is nice and square, and make a note of those numbers in my phone. Confirm they all fly true with field points, and then I’ll set aside six of those for my hunting arrows. I’ll later confirm those all fly true with a broadhead as well. I then have a quiver full of arrows for hunting that I’m not gonna lose/break practicing.
If I need to replace a hunting arrow I look at my note and grab one of the “good” numbered arrows from the practice pile and stick it in the quiver. I can go back to an older batch if I have to (same arrow setup).