Quick Answer: Arrow spine is the stiffness of your arrow shaft — how much it bends when force is applied. It matters because an arrow that flexes too much or too little on release won’t clear the bow cleanly, sending your groups left or right no matter how good your form is. Match spine to […]
Tag Archives: carbon arrows
Quick Answer: To choose arrows for a recurve bow, match arrow spine (stiffness) to your draw weight and draw length using a manufacturer spine chart, then set arrow length about 1–2 inches past your draw. Beginners do well with 500–600 spine aluminum or carbon arrows in the 26–29 inch range. Spine is the single most […]
A tier-by-tier breakdown of carbon arrows by price range for 2026 — what changes between a $45 dozen and a $180 dozen, and where the spend stops paying you back.
Quick Answer: Cut arrows to length by matching your shaft to your draw length, usually adding about 1 inch past the front of the riser at full draw so the point clears the rest. Mark the cut with tape, use an abrasive arrow saw for carbon and a tube cutter for aluminum, and trim in […]
Quick Answer: Arrow spine is the stiffness of your arrow shaft, written as a number like 340 or 500 — the lower the number, the stiffer the arrow. To choose the right spine, match your bow’s actual draw weight and your arrow length (not draw length) against a manufacturer’s spine chart, then adjust for point […]
Carbon vs aluminum arrows isn’t about which is ‘better’ — it’s about matching shaft material to your bow, budget, and goals. Here’s how to choose with confidence.
Measure arrow length from the nock throat to the shaft end, find your safe cut length at full draw, and cut carbon arrows the right way.
A hands-on walkthrough of building your own arrows in 2026 — from reading a spine chart honestly to cutting, fletching, and verifying the finished shaft on the bench.
An arrow is the variable your bow can’t fix. This 2026 guide walks through spine, shaft material, fletching, and FOC so the arrows in your hand actually match the bow on your hip.
Read an arrow spine chart correctly: how draw weight, arrow length, and point weight set your spine — plus paper tuning, bare shaft, and broadhead checks.
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