Method #3 Cost=the price of a router, high-speed drill, 1/4" roundover bit, and about $30 worth of parts. Time per shaft=30-90 seconds depending on desired quality.
The router method is how I make most of my shafts. I can make a dozen nice shafts in less than ten minutes. They require much less sanding, have no chips, gouges or flat spots. Plus, the tolerances on the finished shaft diameters is very tight +/- .002 (usually).
Lots of these have been made, so there are a lot of ways to tweak this to fit your needs. I use a round bit because it cuts about 3 times faster and cleaner than a flush bit like most people use. The down side is that you have to set it up more carefully. Side to side adjustments are made by loosening clamps and moving the router. Finer adjustments are made by tightening the clamps on one side or the other. Up-down adjustmets are made with the router adjustments themselves. With the practice I've had over the last couple years I can set up my router and jig in about five minutes and using about 3' of waste shafting for dial caliper tests. The clamp method is nice because I use my router for other things and it's easy to take it all apart. Once I have it set up, I can make 200 shafts if I need to without a single adjustment.
The payoff of this method is that you can be very picky with the kinds of spines and weights of the shafts you use if you want to. I give a lot of shafts away in hopes that a nice elk or deer will get killed with an arrow shaft I made.
I spin the shafts at about 2,500 rpms. Lower rpms require a slower feed rate.
The pic with the oil around the holes shows the heat generated as the shaft is compressed.
Good luck and feel free to ask questions. If anyone cares, I do make ocean spray and wild rose arrows by hand as well. I know split timber shafts get a C+ on the primitive scale. The last time I had my wood-shop teaching father in law over to my shop, I showed him how I made arrow shafts. When the router was turned off, I handed him a smooth, compressed shaft that read .359 (23/64") on the dial caliper and he said, "man that's primitive." Rifle hunters!
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