I can't believe no one took a close look at that picture and called me out. Those arrows were into the 60yd target, but I was 90 something yards away from it. What I was doing at the time was re-calibrating my sight tape/wheel on a semi-windy day (usually a bad idea ... but ... Kentucky).
There are three arrow types in that photo. The ones with red and white fletchings are 'just' for field tips. The one with yellow fletchings is weighted differently and is made for use with a single bevel broadhead. The one with the blue fletching always flies at that weight and is made for a different type of fixed blade broadhead.
It's the nock poking out from the lower wooden crossbeam to get a laff from. Too dangerous to continue using a carbon arrow if that happens. Thirty Snarl-bucks down the drain.
There are three arrow types in that photo. The ones with red and white fletchings are 'just' for field tips. The one with yellow fletchings is weighted differently and is made for use with a single bevel broadhead. The one with the blue fletching always flies at that weight and is made for a different type of fixed blade broadhead.
It's the nock poking out from the lower wooden crossbeam to get a laff from. Too dangerous to continue using a carbon arrow if that happens. Thirty Snarl-bucks down the drain.