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- *****- Bewertung vom Käufer.Vor über einem JahrBestätigter KaufArrived safely. Well packed. Beautiful pieces!!! Seller is highly recommended!!
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- *****- Bewertung vom Käufer.Vor über einem JahrBestätigter KaufSeller reached out right away, shipped very fast, and even checked to make sure it came intact. It was heavy so shipping was a bit high
Rezensionen (4)

10. Jan 2017
Best you'll ever do for the price!
2 von 2 finden das hilfreich This fletching jig is sturdy and has a great "lower end" shaft/nock holding seat, that accurately rotates the shaft a third turn for each new feather application. The clip, which holds the vein to be glued on, does not apply the vein to the shaft with spring force. Instead, you place it on the stationery magnet platform and then force it into the correct position against the shaft with finger pressure. Once it is snugged tight against the shaft and the glue-laden feather vein aligned properly, wait two minutes for the glue to dry. Then, carefully open the clip and slide it away from the shaft. The shaft does not "lock" into the shaft slot at the left-top of the jig. It just sits in the cut-out groove. Therefore, you must hold it in place with your left hand while applying or releasing the clip, and when rotating the shaft into the next 1/3 rotation position.
In other words, the arrow shaft does not "lock" into the jig. You have to hold it at the top and put downward pressure on it to keep it seated in the lower-end brass nock receiver. I don't use nocks on my crossbow bolts, so I had to file in a groove on the end of each shaft so it would seat in the lower-right brass receiver. There are no instructions included, but lucky for me I'm handy so I figured it all out. Each time you want to rotate the shaft for the next vein, you first loosen the small brass set screw on the rotater apparatus to release it, and then turn
the knurled aluminum knob (which is on the lower far right of the jig) toward you. . .until it clicks into the next vein position. Then, tighten the brass set screw to lock it in and proceed to your next gluing. The one thing I haven't figured out is the right amount of glue. With the vein inserted in the clip, you hold the clip in one hand and apply a continuous even flow of glue to the base of the feather vein. Problem is, it only comes out of the tube in a thickness commensurate with the tip opening on the tube. And no matter how evenly and sparingly I squeeze it along, there are always spurts/drops/globs of glue alongside the base of the vein where it attaches to the bolt/arrow. I'm using the least amount of glue that still maintains an even, linear application, but there's still always some glue extruded onto the shaft. One reminder: When you deem the glue to be dry and go to release the clip from the vein and the magnetized clip platform, make sure to open the clip with your finger tips, and hold the arrow shaft firmly in the upper slot, this along with downward pressure to keep the shaftt from popping out of the brass nock receiver when you pull the clip back and out. The magnets are very strong, so you've really got to exert a lot of force on the clip to move it back and away from the shaft. And that's when the arrow shaft can be knocked out of its alignment anchoring (upper and lower) in the jig. If you use actual nocks on the arrow ends, they will seat into the brass receiver much more securely, thus eliminating a lot of the fuss. The only drawback I can see is that the process is slow, because you have to wait for each individual vein to cure/dry. The answer to this problem is simple. Buy one or two additional jigs. They're certainly cheap enough at 26 bucks. Then, while waiting for one jig to dry, you simply move on to the next
jig and continue the process on a different shaft. By the time you finish with that vein, it'll be time to go back to the first jig and rotate to the next vein application, and so on. So, except for the unexplained glue spurts, I'm lovin' it! Oh, one more thing: You can impart a slant to each vein by simply adjusting the clip platform to the slant you desire.

28. Nov 2018
Great film, terrific price!
Great film (a little heavy, to be sure). Now, I own it, and all for under 5 bucks! Can't beat it!

27. Feb 2019
Try it! You'll like it!
I saw this movie when I was about 12 yrs. old, and I'm happy to say that it holds up! Just as "Man in the Grey Flannel Suit", "The Best Years of Our Lives", "On the Waterfront", and so many others. . .hold up! Lots of films don't, and when you see them years later you wonder what you were thinking to ever have thought them good in the first place. "Donovan's Brain", like "Them", was one of the first science fiction films
of our era, and they were both well written, well acted, and well presented. You can't ask for more.