Yeah, I used to never bother with it and just made a bunch of mediocre arrows till I came up with some that flew pretty good - I have lots of cane... I realized that cane arrows last a long time. If you make a bunch of crappy arrows, you are stuck with them! These days, I have taken some of the good advice offered on this site, and taken more time with my arrows and they have gotten a lot more consistent. The spine check is a good place to start. I cut the cane to length right after the spine checking routine and also mark the stiff side of the arrow at that time. I cut my self nocks right after. I have gone back to mostly three fletch arrows also. Having that cock feather to guide me into proper orientation of arrow to bow works better for me. I have also quit sanding the nodes. PatB's tip on heat compression worked well for me. I have a foot long section of steel rail that I heat up a little with the propane torch. I compress the cane nodes between a little steel bar and that hot rail by putting some pressure on them and rolling them back and forth. It doesn't have to be real hot and the steel rail stays hot long enough to do a bunch of cane arrows. This method keeps me from picking up the heat gun again and again. The nodes just go away under compression. Pretty cool - thanks PatB! I think it makes a stronger arrow, since you aren't removing material during sanding. Cane was put on this earth to be an arrow. They hit where you are looking and won't hardly wear out.