Doug McCoy Traditional Archery.
Here is my homemade arrow shaft spine tester. It uses common hardware purchased at my local hardware store and a dial
indicator that I picked up on E-Bay. Total cost, including the dial indicator, was less than $50.
Jim Hill's Spine Tester
If there is anything original about it (doubtful), it is the weight arrangement. I have never liked the idea of the weight hanging beside the measuring
point on the shaft, as it does on the other spine testers I've seen. I suppose it works OK, but it just bugs me. I wanted to place the two pound
weight directly over the center of the shaft and the dial indicator plunger directly under it. It just seems simpler and more precise to me.
Just to review, the spine or spline of an arrow shaft is a measure of its' stiffness. The accepted standard for measuring spine is to measure the
deflection of the shaft at the midpoint of a 26 inch span when placed under a two pound load. The more deflection, the less stiff the shaft, which
is to say the lower its' spine measurement.

You can use the raw deflection measurement itself, for example .436 inches. Or you can compute the spine using the formula 26/deflection in
inches=spine. For example, 26 divided by .436 equals 59.6. You can express the spine of that shaft as .436 inches or as 59.6 pounds. It doesn't
matter whether you express the spine (stiffness) of the arrow in inches, pounds or light years. As long as you use the same method consistently,
you will get the right arrows for your bow. If your bow shoots best with arrows of spine "X" (inches, pounds, light years, whatever), build your arrows
with shafts of that spine.

The function of a spine tester is to support an arrow shaft on two points that are 26 inches apart, place a 2 pound load on the shaft at the midpoint of
the 26 inch span and measure the deflection as accurately and consistently as possible.
The arrow shaft supports are 90 degree angle brackets placed exactly 26 inches apart, with a notch filed into the top edge of each to hold the
arrow shaft. The photo above shows the notch in one of the supports.
The dial indicator is mounted on an angle bracket exactly midway between the two supports, 13 inches from each. It is mounted at a height
that will allow an arrow shaft to barely touch the plunger of the indicator and displace it by a small amount when the shaft is placed on the
supports. Of course, the dial indicator must be placed precisely under the bottom of the arrow shaft as the latter rests on the supports. A little
judicious bending of the angle bracket accomplishes this.
Another (larger) angle bracket is mounted beside the first. It holds two eye bolts that serve to hold the 2 lb. weight in a vertical
position. They are carefully adjusted to place the center of each eye directly over the dial indicator shaft. NOTE! It is very important
that the weight is a close fit through the eyes of the eye bolts, so that it is held in a vertical position. My weight is a 3/4 inch bolt,
which fits closely through two 3/4 eye bolts.
Dial indicator mounting detail.
Right side view.
Right perspective.
Left side view.
The two pound weight is a 3/4 inch diameter hex bolt (8 inches long under the head) with enough washers to bring it up to just less than
two pounds as measured on the hardware store bulk nail scale. I used epoxy to glue all of the washers together at the head end of the
bolt. Then I took that bolt/washer assembly to my grocery store seafood department, which has a good digital scale that registers to the
hundreth of a pound. I had them weigh the assembly and noted the weight. I subracted that figure from two pounds and converted the
difference to grains (1 ounce equals 437.5 grains). Then I took some lead fishing weight and, using a knife and my reloading grain scale, I
cut the lead until it was exactly what I needed to make the weight up to two pounds. I epoxied the lead to the very top of the bolt head. It
is the grey blob on the head of the bolt in the photo.
Here you see the tester before putting the shaft on the supports. You can't see it well in this photo, but the needle is indicating zero
deflection, as you would expect.
I adjusted the height of the dial indicator so that a shaft would always depress the plunger a little, even without a load, in order to
ensure a positive contact. As you see, the needle has moved. I keep the dial loose, so that I can rotate it to align the zero index with
the needle in this position. After adjusting the dial, I lower the two pound weight through the eye bolts to rest on the arrow shaft.
Here you see the weight in position on the arrow shaft. I note the deflection measurement on the dial and compare it to a
spine-deflection table that I made up and taped to the base of the tester.
Spine-Deflection table. It is just a spreadsheet printout of deflection
values resulting from the formula 26/spine=deflection.
NOTE! Don't make the mistake I did. Use a dial indicator that has a full oneinch measurement capability. You need it if
you want to measure the lighterspine shafts. My indicator is a nominal half-inch model. Actually, it goes to .565 in. So I
can meaure shafts that deflect up to .565 under a two pound load, but no more. Since 26 divided by .565= 46, I can
measure the spine of any shaft equal to or GREATER than a 46 lb. spine, but no lighter than that. If, for example, you
need to measure a 40 lb. spine shaft, you need an indicator that can measure a .65 inch displacement. Mine can't. The
plunger bottoms out at .565 in.

Sorry. I don't have plans or measurements to offer, because dial indicators come in a number of sizes, and everything is
sized to work with the dial indicator that you have. You have to custom fit everything to the dial indicator. If you study the
photos you will be able to figure it all out.
If you have any questions or suggestions on how to make this page more helpful, email me at