I made the mistake of thinking you buy the jig and straight out of the box it's ready to go. It's not quite that way, you have to set it up for the vane positions on the arrow etc
At minute one when he aligns the tool to the center of the arrow you could also alter the angle, which gives the spin. That's totally possible, but no curved clamp available, so you can only fo the version with the straight feathers. Thing to consider: these are probably not made anymore, since Avalon changed name to Skylon.
Er....arrow nocks usually each have a little mark on one side to indicate the cock fletch position and use that to line up the nock holding dial. I actuallu prefer the horizontal fletch jigs as opposed to these angled fletch jigs.
excellent guide, clear and concise .I will probably buy one on the strength of this video thank you for posting
Super understandable video. Thank you.
A question:
Does it matter at which of the 3 positions the mainspring is? If not how do I know where it goes
Cheers bud…v helpful…👊🏹
Thank you very much! It´s a very understandable video.
Thanks mate, I'm going to buy one of those
I made the mistake of thinking you buy the jig and straight out of the box it's ready to go. It's not quite that way, you have to set it up for the vane positions on the arrow etc
What can happen if one of 3 feather is little bit smaller? All the feathers must be the same size?
Very good 👍🏹
I have the same arrow fletcher but the magnet is way to strong for fluent working.
are 3 positions the same angle? because i know they shouldnt be for recurve so...
They are the same angle which is normal for recurve target shooting. Who told you otherwise?
Hello, I borrowed one that look exactly like that. But I accidentally push the bottom up and I have no clue how to push back. Can you help me?
Would you like to develop an app?
why not just turn the knock after?
Just bought this product .Does anybody know if this jig sets the fletch at a slight angle so the arrow spins .Thanks .
At minute one when he aligns the tool to the center of the arrow you could also alter the angle, which gives the spin. That's totally possible, but no curved clamp available, so you can only fo the version with the straight feathers. Thing to consider: these are probably not made anymore, since Avalon changed name to Skylon.
@@erwocoolis9451 Thanks pal.
Er....arrow nocks usually each have a little mark on one side to indicate the cock fletch position and use that to line up the nock holding dial. I actuallu prefer the horizontal fletch jigs as opposed to these angled fletch jigs.
Too be fair, that clamp looks awfull..