we used wood arrows for years...you don't need to have your bow set to the extreme. Wood arrows with a shell casing glued on the tip for a blunt...cheap and easy, no worries if the arrow goes bye bye
we used wood arrows for years...you don't need to have your bow set to the extreme. Wood arrows with a shell casing glued on the tip for a blunt...cheap and easy, no worries if the arrow goes bye bye
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i use the rubber blunt ends work great with my omen pro. i aim for the head no body shots
G5 small game heads, it might be expensive if I lose one every now and then, but it's fun!
Arrows are too expensive. Save your money for beer, wait to weeks and blast the suckers with a 12 guage!
JP
Its funner with a bow.I use judos:but at over 300 fps im lookin for arrows a lot more than I did with my older bow.It sure is a blast!
I use judo's, I find shooting at birds where there is something for the judo to catch on reduces lost arrows like grass or willows.
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you can make good strong small game/bird arrows from home depot bamboo garden stakes. i've made a few hundred for friends and myself. spiral fletching work the best IMO. even shot in the air they only go about 20-30yds. they can be shot from both compounds and trad gear. cut in self nocks behind a node and reinforce with silk thread or sinew. for the points, i drilled out the tip and hot glued in duplex nails and filed the head to a point, the shoulder helps to slow penetration. i've used them on ALL waterfowl and upland birds, small game and a couple coyotes back in alberta, pigeons were about the only thing i had a problem with, but, hell they are a small target.
i tested the durability of them because a few "experts" claimed they wouldn't stand up. i shot them at a 1/2" sheet of plywood and had 8" of penetration at 10yds with my 55# ELB. and 11" with my 60# guardian. shot them at carp in the sloughs, aerial shooting, squirrel hunting, hell i shot them at steel plates trying to brake them. they never broke, had one split at the point due to shooting at a steel plate more than a dozen times. trimmed it an inch and refit the nail point, good to go. i still have that same dozen sitting in my quiver and only 2 needed a small amount of straightening. they are cheap but, far better than most give credit for. yes they look primitive, but, each arrow cost you about $1.75 and last a hell of a lot longer than anything else. good luck and shoot straight.