I recently started watching your videos Johnathon , I soon realized there's a lot more to archery than just shooting the bow, thank you, you do a great job.
How high profile of a fletching should I have if I’m going to be shooting a wide cut single bevel Broadhead? I’m trying to avoid the typical blazer vanes. I really like the shield cut X3 vanes by bohning because of how quiet they can be.
It is an older one that we do not sell anymore I'm afraid. We do have a lot of great bow display racks here though: www.3riversarchery.com/buy/bows/bow-accessories/bow-cases-display
Thank you for the video... I do have a question. Do you Happen to sell a 4" feather with the 5" feather height? If so can you please point me to it. Thank you.
Depending upon how many you have, I use the Goat Tuff products. They have an accelerator, so able to get through a lot of arrows quickly. www.3riversarchery.com/goat-tuff-accelerator.html and www.3riversarchery.com/goat-tuff-high-performance-glue.html
You will want to match the clamp to the wing. Though with a straight clamp, you match the offset. So a right offset should be with right wing feathers.
More fletching will offer more stabilization, but if you have a well tuned arrow then you do not need a lot of fletching to help correct the arrow in-flight. So feel free to try out 3 inch fletchings. Worse case, you strip them and re-fletch.
It seems that arrows are the key factor , arrow weight, length, fletching size shape , but always wondered about how much fletching twist mounting on the shaft , like a bullet twist with rifling coming out of the barrel of a gun , would it make it more accurate 🤔
Yes, the sooner you can get the arrow spinning (more helical) the more accurate it will be. You will be sacrificing speed and distance (will drop sooner), but it will be more accurate.
I recently started watching your videos Johnathon , I soon realized there's a lot more to archery than just shooting the bow, thank you, you do a great job.
How high profile of a fletching should I have if I’m going to be shooting a wide cut single bevel Broadhead? I’m trying to avoid the typical blazer vanes. I really like the shield cut X3 vanes by bohning because of how quiet they can be.
Jonathan thanks for the explanation. Who makes that bow hanger?
It is an older one that we do not sell anymore I'm afraid. We do have a lot of great bow display racks here though: www.3riversarchery.com/buy/bows/bow-accessories/bow-cases-display
Thank you for the video...
I do have a question.
Do you Happen to sell a 4" feather with the 5" feather height? If so can you please point me to it. Thank you.
Very helpful video!
Need to fletch arrows for the local Elementary School, what adhesive do you recommend or would I be better with a “shrink fletching “ set up?
Depending upon how many you have, I use the Goat Tuff products. They have an accelerator, so able to get through a lot of arrows quickly. www.3riversarchery.com/goat-tuff-accelerator.html and www.3riversarchery.com/goat-tuff-high-performance-glue.html
Can you use the same clamp for a right wing vs left wing?
You will want to match the clamp to the wing. Though with a straight clamp, you match the offset. So a right offset should be with right wing feathers.
@@3RiversArchery Thanks for the reply, im going to have to try and learn.
I was considering 3in fletch to traditional arrows as I already have a Arizona fletch gig. Will they possibly fly badly vs 4-5in?
More fletching will offer more stabilization, but if you have a well tuned arrow then you do not need a lot of fletching to help correct the arrow in-flight. So feel free to try out 3 inch fletchings. Worse case, you strip them and re-fletch.
@@3RiversArchery thank you
It seems that arrows are the key factor , arrow weight, length, fletching size shape , but always wondered about how much fletching twist mounting on the shaft , like a bullet twist with rifling coming out of the barrel of a gun , would it make it more accurate 🤔
Yes, the sooner you can get the arrow spinning (more helical) the more accurate it will be. You will be sacrificing speed and distance (will drop sooner), but it will be more accurate.
Fletch this and fletch that.