ANTSIR 30 Fiberglass Archery Target Arrows- Practice Arrows for Kids Youth or Begineers on Recurve Bow Long Bow Traditional Bow (Green Vanes Pack of 12)








Key features
- •One Dozen High quality fiberglass standard target practice arrows for recurve, traditional, long bows.
- •Colored plastic fletching & nock.rounded permanent nickel-plated stainless steel bullet tip perfect for target practice & beginners.
- •The tips aren't very sharp,they are rather rounded on the end for safety.
- •A solid set of practice arrows.It has good performance , low hand shock with good speed.
- •30 inches great value practice arrows. rated up to 40 pounds bows
ANTSIR 30 Fiberglass Archery Target Arrows- Practice Arrows for Kids Youth or Begineers on Recurve Bow Long Bow Traditional Bow (Green Vanes Pack of 12)
List Price: $43.63$39.27DEALYou Save: $4.36 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 25, 2026In Stock (1)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection
Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers3.8
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5★
10%
4★
10%
3★
60%
2★
10%
1★
10%
Incredibly Cheap Construnction
Amazon Customer•March 12, 2018
Long story short, these arrows are built to be inexpensive and disposable. Don't buy them unless you're looking for throwaways.
One of my arrows shipped damaged to the point of unusability.
I'm not sure if this is common for the really cheap arrows, but the nocks do not sit flush with the shaft, and are actually caps that are glued over it. They sit with maybe a millimeter or two thicker than the shaft, meaning they will actually hit the back of a bow's shelf when released. While I haven't had one break off just yet, I have had them chip the wood off of my wooden takedown bow, and I'd imagine this also affects accuracy at least a little.
I could see green from the fletching getting rubbed off onto my bow after a few shots.
The tips are actually fairly sturdy, but like the nocks, they are simply glued on over the shaft, and if they got broken or fell off you'd have to re-glue them or trash the arrow.
If you do buy these, make sure it's for a lower poundage bow (I shot mine out of a 40lb recurve and broke a couple when I missed and hit something sturdier than dirt,) make sure your arrow rest is well protected or sturdy enough to withstand a bit of abuse, and don't expect any performance or durability out of them.
One of my arrows shipped damaged to the point of unusability.
I'm not sure if this is common for the really cheap arrows, but the nocks do not sit flush with the shaft, and are actually caps that are glued over it. They sit with maybe a millimeter or two thicker than the shaft, meaning they will actually hit the back of a bow's shelf when released. While I haven't had one break off just yet, I have had them chip the wood off of my wooden takedown bow, and I'd imagine this also affects accuracy at least a little.
I could see green from the fletching getting rubbed off onto my bow after a few shots.
The tips are actually fairly sturdy, but like the nocks, they are simply glued on over the shaft, and if they got broken or fell off you'd have to re-glue them or trash the arrow.
If you do buy these, make sure it's for a lower poundage bow (I shot mine out of a 40lb recurve and broke a couple when I missed and hit something sturdier than dirt,) make sure your arrow rest is well protected or sturdy enough to withstand a bit of abuse, and don't expect any performance or durability out of them.
but they are good other thatn
Ben W.•February 27, 2018
They would be ok for shooting at a soft target with a bow of probably 15-20 pounds max. I shot it and it hit the wooden fence and the shaft splintered. but they are good other thatn that
One Star
Jamie•December 26, 2017
Arrows were not straight.
but i will spend more in the future on better arrows.
Nobody Important•October 4, 2017
They are okay for starting out, but i will spend more in the future on better arrows.
These are good for informal target practice with light draw weight bows
Gary in Ohio•September 21, 2017
These are good for informal target practice with light draw weight bows. For the price, they are a great deal. I intentionally shot one at a concrete wall three times. The tip got scratched up but otherwise the arrow was fine. I flexed one quite bit and it did not break. The vanes are a little small but are tough enough. My nocks were all glued on correctly and none have come off.
I was curious about their spine weight. So I looked up how that was measured and rigged up something. I measured three ANTSIR's, a Goldtip and an Easton. The name brand arrows measured close to their stated values. So I think my rig is good enough. The spine of these arrows is in the 1400 to 1450 range. That's very flexible.
I was curious about their spine weight. So I looked up how that was measured and rigged up something. I measured three ANTSIR's, a Goldtip and an Easton. The name brand arrows measured close to their stated values. So I think my rig is good enough. The spine of these arrows is in the 1400 to 1450 range. That's very flexible.
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