IMHO....Boo is totally different than river cane...
But the Tonkin shafts that are being sold now that are ground down, scraped and carmelized spinned, sets will break a lot easier then the raw Tonkin shafts I've used. I think the majority of the arrows made in Asia are shot at target butts of some sort, not 3-D targets or as much hunting with them as we do over here.
I am with Eddie on this one ......I have had Asia shafts that were too
immature for shafts that were (I think) sanded down and carmelized (due to the young shoots or sugar content) during heat straighting break easier than river cane or season Tonkin shafts. I do sand only the roughness off river cane nodes. IMO if your shooting an arrow with the correct spine the nodes sticking out does matter as far as performance .....only looks.
So I grabbed the shaft in my drill and rotated it while running it over the belt sander. I turned it down until it spined the 30-40# that I can use. I make sure they are as straight as possible before doing this. Does it weaken them? You bet it does, that's what I'm after. I give them a real vigorous bend before I use them. Some break in the bend test but some untouched one break too. I give them a coat of some kind of finish.
I agree with DC on this point and have done it my self...but only with
Boo would never do this with river cane.....
This is a great hobby....I love it.
DBar