EquipmentπŸ“– 11 min read

How to Choose the Right Arrow Spine: Complete Selection Guide

Arrow spine affects accuracy more than most archers realize. Learn how to calculate your ideal spine, understand deflection, and choose arrows that fly true.

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ArcheryBuddy Team
How to Choose the Right Arrow Spine: Complete Selection Guide

Arrow spine is one of the most misunderstood concepts in archery, yet it's crucial for accuracy. Shooting arrows with the wrong spine is like driving with misaligned tiresβ€”you can compensate, but you'll never achieve optimal performance. This guide demystifies spine selection.

πŸ“ What is Arrow Spine?

Spine refers to the stiffness (or flexibility) of an arrow shaft. It's measured by how much the arrow bends when a weight is applied to its center.

Spine Number Explained
300= Stiff spine (for heavy draw weights)
500= Medium spine (most common)
800= Weak/flexible spine (for light draw weights)

Lower number = stiffer arrow. Higher number = more flexible arrow.

⚠️
Common Confusion

A "300 spine" arrow is STIFFER than a "500 spine" arrow. The number represents how much the arrow deflects (in thousandths of an inch), so lower = less bend = stiffer.

Diagram showing arrow spine stiffness: too weak, correct spine, and too stiff

Understanding arrow spine: Too weak bends too much, correct spine flexes perfectly, too stiff barely bends

🎯 Why Spine Matters for Accuracy

When you release an arrow, it bends around the bow (called "archer's paradox"). The spine determines how much it bends and whether it recovers correctly in flight.

❌ Too Weak (Underspined)

  • β€’ Arrow bends too much on release
  • β€’ Arrows fly left (for right-handed)
  • β€’ Poor accuracy and erratic groups
  • β€’ Can cause arrow damage or breakage

❌ Too Stiff (Overspined)

  • β€’ Arrow doesn't flex enough
  • β€’ Arrows fly right (for right-handed)
  • β€’ Reduced forgiveness for form errors
  • β€’ Potentially wasted energy

βœ… Correct Spine

  • β€’ Arrow flexes and recovers perfectly
  • β€’ Straight, consistent flight path
  • β€’ Tight, centered groups
  • β€’ Maximum energy transfer to target

βš™οΈ Factors That Affect Your Ideal Spine

1

Draw Weight

Higher draw weight = need stiffer spine. A 60lb bow needs much stiffer arrows than a 30lb bow.

2

Arrow Length

Longer arrows flex more. If you cut arrows shorter, they become stiffer. Add 1" = weaker; cut 1" = stiffer.

3

Point Weight

Heavier points = weakens dynamic spine. 100gr point shoots weaker than 80gr on the same shaft.

4

Bow Type

Compound bows need stiffer arrows than recurves at the same draw weight due to let-off mechanics.

πŸ“Š Quick Spine Selection Chart

Use this as a starting point. Always verify with your arrow manufacturer's specific chart.

Draw WeightRecurve SpineCompound Spine
25-30 lbs700-800600-700
30-35 lbs600-700500-600
35-40 lbs500-600400-500
40-45 lbs450-500400
45-50 lbs400-450350-400
50-55 lbs350-400340
55-60 lbs340-350300-340
60-70 lbs300-340250-300

πŸ§ͺ How to Test If Your Spine is Correct

Bare Shaft Test

The most reliable method to check spine tuning:

  1. Shoot 3 fletched arrows at 20 yards - note grouping
  2. Shoot 3 bare shafts (no fletching) at same target
  3. Compare where bare shafts hit vs fletched arrows
Bare Left

Spine too weak

Together

Spine correct! βœ“

Bare Right

Spine too stiff

πŸ’‘
Pro Tips
  • β€’ When in doubt, go slightly stifferβ€”you can always add point weight to weaken
  • β€’ Keep a consistent arrow length (mark your arrows)
  • β€’ Check manufacturer chartsβ€”each brand is slightly different
  • β€’ Your spine needs may change as your form improves

Is Your Form Affecting Your Arrows?

Inconsistent form can mask spine issues. Use ArcheryBuddy to perfect your technique before fine-tuning your arrows.

βœ… Key Takeaways

  • βœ“Spine = arrow stiffness. Lower numbers = stiffer arrows
  • βœ“Draw weight, arrow length, and point weight all affect your ideal spine
  • βœ“Use manufacturer charts as a starting point, then fine-tune
  • βœ“The bare shaft test is the most reliable way to verify spine
Tags:#arrows#spine#equipment#selection#beginner#intermediate