Some of those fletchings look awsome. Tempted to try the eagle stlyes on my field arrows when I make them.There is a different style of jig on the Flybow.com shop website
http://www.flybowshop.com/assets/s2dmain.html?http://www.flybowshop.com/
Under the Arrow building material section.
An unusual method and I think recommended by someone on Archeryuk.
I do not know how strong the joint would be.
Best wishes, Mark Huff
Mark, the repair is very strong if you do a clean cut and a nice glue line with a waterproof wood glue. I have got a lot of use and value-for-money from one of these jigs. Very easy to use. It is more of a repair type footing as opposed to a footing in the usual sense. If I broke an arrow behind the point it was useless as it would be an inch to short. Now I can just splice on a new section and the arrow is good as new. This is really important when you have spent a lot of time and money getting a matched set of competition arrows. If you use the same wood the repair is actually hard to spot and has no effect on spine.There is a different style of jig on the Flybow.com shop website
http://www.flybowshop.com/assets/s2dmain.html?http://www.flybowshop.com/
Under the Arrow building material section.
An unusual method and I think recommended by someone on Archeryuk.
I do not know how strong the joint would be.
Best wishes, Mark Huff
That's the jig that I have. I have some questions for the designer/ seller and have had a hard time getting a hold of him. How have your arrows come out? I recently tried hand cutting a 4 wing splice on some stock that was not an arrow. I learned a lot about tapers, blade thickness effects, etc. I think I'll try again.Sorry Huffy. The Link is harder to find than it used to be, but here are 2 photos that show the jig for use with a router.
http://i130.photobucket.com/albums/p244/wingate_52/FootingJigwithShaftAfterFinalPass.jpg