moviebuff5
Sr Member
Kurtyboy,
The arrow looks to be aluminum (silver ring behind the point insert), so I would guess Easton. The Nock also looks to have an "E" on it, though it is a small photo. They do not have any current offerings I am aware of that are solid black since they want them branded. Based on the width of the silver stripe in front of the nock, the shaft may be a ground nock swage rather than a nock bushing. If that is the case, you might be able to get most of the markings off an XX75 Tribute shaft, if it is available in the correct size. The way the vanes look makes me think they might be Mylar, and they look to be right helical, though they may just be offset and the way they have been stored is putting the bend in them. If someone can scale the arrow shaft (no nock, no broadhead case) using the broadhead case you can narrow down the likely candidates for arrow shaft size, since they probably did not cut these to length. If nothing else, it will give a minimum length. The dimension for the fitting at the base of the broadhead would be very useful as well, as that could be used to scale the shaft diameter. Here is a site that explains what the aluminum arrow sizes mean. Shooting the Stickbow - Aluminum Arrow Guide Compare that info with Easton's aluminum shaft selector chart and you should have a few options.
The arrow looks to be aluminum (silver ring behind the point insert), so I would guess Easton. The Nock also looks to have an "E" on it, though it is a small photo. They do not have any current offerings I am aware of that are solid black since they want them branded. Based on the width of the silver stripe in front of the nock, the shaft may be a ground nock swage rather than a nock bushing. If that is the case, you might be able to get most of the markings off an XX75 Tribute shaft, if it is available in the correct size. The way the vanes look makes me think they might be Mylar, and they look to be right helical, though they may just be offset and the way they have been stored is putting the bend in them. If someone can scale the arrow shaft (no nock, no broadhead case) using the broadhead case you can narrow down the likely candidates for arrow shaft size, since they probably did not cut these to length. If nothing else, it will give a minimum length. The dimension for the fitting at the base of the broadhead would be very useful as well, as that could be used to scale the shaft diameter. Here is a site that explains what the aluminum arrow sizes mean. Shooting the Stickbow - Aluminum Arrow Guide Compare that info with Easton's aluminum shaft selector chart and you should have a few options.