A bare shaft that rotates right or left when fired means nothing. It has no real force acting upon it to go one way or the other. So, fletch with a clockwise offset or helical and be done. Clockwise offset will also keep your broadheads from unscrewing mid flight.
I wouldnt go as far and say it means nothing. Yes you can get away with fletching how you like. However Im all about consistency and reliability. No reason to fight the arrow flight. A small dab of string wax, nail polish, loc tite , or hot melt will keep those BHs nice a tight
A bare shaft that rotates right or left when fired means nothing. It has no real force acting upon it to go one way or the other. So, fletch with a clockwise offset or helical and be done. Clockwise offset will also keep your broadheads from unscrewing mid flight.
I wouldnt go as far and say it means nothing. Yes you can get away with fletching how you like. However Im all about consistency and reliability. No reason to fight the arrow flight.
A small dab of string wax, nail polish, loc tite , or hot melt will keep those BHs nice a tight
Jimmie I totally agree, we've been doing this for years and it's worked great. A broadhead unscrewing as it goes through an animal is not good.
Really awesome, I like it, looking forward for your next video, keep it up! Get rapid results > *Promo SM* !