mfllood3800
WKR
I am hoping Beendare and Brenden and others will chime in.
This post is not to argue, but to discover what you learned that I haven't, in regards to skinnies, which I am assuming is focused on but not limited to the outserts.?
I will lay out my process which may be why I still like them and haven't had any issues (Yet ) ??
I didn't want to keep derailing other peoples threads.
I keep seeing this pop up from guys with way more experience than me, but no details that I have seen, have been given, which leads me to believe it is an opinion. I am curious to the facts behind the opinion, so I can form my own.
I'm not new to archery, been shooting 36 years and do all my own building tuning etc.
Killed a ton of big game, though not as many as some, but plenty none the less.
I have shot hundreds of shaft / component variations thru out the years.
I will take manufacturers recommendations and often stretch or altar just to see what does and doesn't work in my bow, that is not normal.
PSE Full Throttle 28.62" DL at 73 lbs shooting a 500+ gr arrow. This cam system hits harder than most and has led me to shift to the heavier side of most spine charts by some small amount. I will almost always use a 250 or 300 spine with my FOC choice.
I checked my FOC last night and again, right now I am at 16.8%
Initial paper tune, walk back tune, then broad head tune with little no adjustment at this point.
I have really liked the skinny arrows and SS outserts from BEA. I have shot other skinnies from other companies and am liking BEA at the moment for consistency and quality.
I don't use the alumn outserts that come with these shafts, as they are manipulated quite easily, and fit poorly. So I use the SS outserts, and I always have to rub a minute an mount of the shaft to get the ss outsert on.
My normal shots out west where it is always windy is 60 yards up to 100 yards and average of right at 75 yrds.
I don't shy away from long shots at all.
I really feel this is what led me to the skinny set ups with slightly higher foc, for how and where I hunt.
.
I always get the heavier SS outserts and use a custom rubberized glue that holds incredibly well, yet wont go brittle.
I take the time to pre weigh every component, set in groups, so when done I have a consistent weight and true spinning set up.
I spin test at every step..............
-initial inspection of pre cut shaft
- final cut (s) on shaft
- after fletched
- before/after outsert is glued
- final broad head assembly
I square all ends of shaft incl outsert if needed (have yet to have to do this with SS outserts)
I have over a thousand shots and many of these shafts and still using them today.
I frequently check the spin, to make sure the components have not shifted.
I shot a brand new iron will vented broad head the other day, and gouged the edge of one of the blades, I thought for sure my outsert would be off. These iron wills are stout. But the shaft still spins perfectly.
I have not lost an outsert in any of my block targets, or animals.
So with all that said, tell me please, what you discovered about outserts and skinny's you guys don't like.
I value the opinions of some guys, and have realized long ago, just cause I don't agree, doesnt make them wrong. I may just not have been in the same scenario yet, or taking a different process.
Sorry for the long post, but trying to eliminate conjecture , assumptions and offer as much info to help avoid issues wasting your time..
Thx guys
This post is not to argue, but to discover what you learned that I haven't, in regards to skinnies, which I am assuming is focused on but not limited to the outserts.?
I will lay out my process which may be why I still like them and haven't had any issues (Yet ) ??
I didn't want to keep derailing other peoples threads.
I keep seeing this pop up from guys with way more experience than me, but no details that I have seen, have been given, which leads me to believe it is an opinion. I am curious to the facts behind the opinion, so I can form my own.
I'm not new to archery, been shooting 36 years and do all my own building tuning etc.
Killed a ton of big game, though not as many as some, but plenty none the less.
I have shot hundreds of shaft / component variations thru out the years.
I will take manufacturers recommendations and often stretch or altar just to see what does and doesn't work in my bow, that is not normal.
PSE Full Throttle 28.62" DL at 73 lbs shooting a 500+ gr arrow. This cam system hits harder than most and has led me to shift to the heavier side of most spine charts by some small amount. I will almost always use a 250 or 300 spine with my FOC choice.
I checked my FOC last night and again, right now I am at 16.8%
Initial paper tune, walk back tune, then broad head tune with little no adjustment at this point.
I have really liked the skinny arrows and SS outserts from BEA. I have shot other skinnies from other companies and am liking BEA at the moment for consistency and quality.
I don't use the alumn outserts that come with these shafts, as they are manipulated quite easily, and fit poorly. So I use the SS outserts, and I always have to rub a minute an mount of the shaft to get the ss outsert on.
My normal shots out west where it is always windy is 60 yards up to 100 yards and average of right at 75 yrds.
I don't shy away from long shots at all.
I really feel this is what led me to the skinny set ups with slightly higher foc, for how and where I hunt.
.
I always get the heavier SS outserts and use a custom rubberized glue that holds incredibly well, yet wont go brittle.
I take the time to pre weigh every component, set in groups, so when done I have a consistent weight and true spinning set up.
I spin test at every step..............
-initial inspection of pre cut shaft
- final cut (s) on shaft
- after fletched
- before/after outsert is glued
- final broad head assembly
I square all ends of shaft incl outsert if needed (have yet to have to do this with SS outserts)
I have over a thousand shots and many of these shafts and still using them today.
I frequently check the spin, to make sure the components have not shifted.
I shot a brand new iron will vented broad head the other day, and gouged the edge of one of the blades, I thought for sure my outsert would be off. These iron wills are stout. But the shaft still spins perfectly.
I have not lost an outsert in any of my block targets, or animals.
So with all that said, tell me please, what you discovered about outserts and skinny's you guys don't like.
I value the opinions of some guys, and have realized long ago, just cause I don't agree, doesnt make them wrong. I may just not have been in the same scenario yet, or taking a different process.
Sorry for the long post, but trying to eliminate conjecture , assumptions and offer as much info to help avoid issues wasting your time..
Thx guys