silasbowhunter
WKR
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2019
- Messages
- 848
I’ve heard Easton is working on a lighter Axis.
If this is true, I’ll switch in a heartbeat!
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I’ve heard Easton is working on a lighter Axis.
Are those GT's? I have a buddy that just started archery last year, he has GT Hunter XT's and he breaks an arrow almost every time he misses a target. He's only shooting 65lbs and has a 27" draw. My GT Kinetic XT 200's seemed pretty brittle like that too. Out of three dozen, 17 broke behind the insert, 1 BH got pushed back into the tip, 13 wobble, and only 5 were still shootable after 3 years. I've been shooting a dozen RIP TKO's now for almost 4 years without a single failure.
So ya, there are arrows out there for everyone to meet whatever expectations they have. Perhaps even these UV 1K arrows will meet someone's expectations and they'll be happy with them. Who knows.
I've always heard how their shafts were supposedly tough (and I've seen Gillingham's video bending them), but I just haven't seen this toughness in actual use. Most of the time his arrow will fly over or under a 3D target and we find the pieces back in the brush. I'm sure they hit branches, gravel, dirt, maybe some rocks. Just standard stuff. He's not the only one I've seen break them. Reminds me of my ultralight Victory HV 300's at 6.9gpi. They're fine into soft foam, but anything else and they're broken.In my experience, the GT hunters are some of the toughest shafts out there, depends on spine of course, but mine have survived glances that put them sideways into trees. If your buddy is breaking one everytime he misses a target, I'd hate to see what he is shooting into.
I've always heard how their shafts were supposedly tough (and I've seen Gillingham's video bending them), but I just haven't seen this toughness in actual use. Most of the time his arrow will fly over or under a 3D target and we find the pieces back in the brush. I'm sure they hit branches, gravel, dirt, maybe some rocks. Just standard stuff. He's not the only one I've seen break them. Reminds me of my ultralight Victory HV 300's at 6.9gpi. They're fine into soft foam, but anything else and they're broken.
The worst durability I have seen is the BE Rampage, and the GT Airstrike. A buddy of mine blew up a 350 Rampage shooting into that outdoor carpet material at a local range just the other day. Even the 250 Rampage is extremely brittle. I believe this is because both those shafts use high modulus carbon.
I had some of them in 250 and actually thought they were decent. The BE literally cracks the shaft just by hitting a hard spot in a target. Absolutely pathetic.Try some victory 3dhv or whatever the hunting version is.
Makes those Rampage shafts look like Axis.
I don't usually get too wrapped up in arrow shaft durability. I don't find it to really be an issue on animals or if you hit what you are aiming at. If I don't hit what I'm aiming at, I don't mind a stupid tax/fee.
I loose more arrows in tall grass/brush than to breaking I think. I'd rather have an arrow assembled around a targeted weight for it's purpose than to be worried about how durable it is and if it will survive trees or especially a cinderblock.
I had some of them in 250 and actually thought they were decent. The BE literally cracks the shaft just by hitting a hard spot in a target. Absolutely pathetic.
Nope, he's got the Hunter XT 340's. I know because I bought them for him.He isn't shooting the GT ultralight is he? Those aren't nearly the same.
My experience is the same.I shot some Rampage shafts in 300 spine for a little while. Didn't have issues with them except the halfouts.
Haven't found a halfout that didn't eventually have some sort of issues it seems.
My experience is the same.
I can’t remember the last time an arrow shaft broke because I hit the rebar in a 3D target, or shot the wrong pin and put one into something other than the target, but I have bent a lot of half outs.
Even then though, I heat up the half out and pull it, and the shafts haven’t been cracked.
They will probably end up doubling down and offering a glue in broadhead next. This is just the beginning.I don’t get it. Why do we need 4.5 mm arrows that still require a half out?