Bushing
A bushing is a small reinforcement collar pressed into the rear end of a carbon arrow shaft that protects the shaft's carbon edge and provides a standardized seat for a pin nock. Without a bushing, the raw carbon inner diameter determines nock fit — which varies by batch and wears unpredictably over thousands of shots.Details
The bushing's primary role is nock-seat standardization. Carbon shaft IDs vary slightly between manufacturing batches, and the carbon edge itself can chip or fray under repeated nock-snap loads. A bushing solves both problems: it is a precision-machined aluminum or steel collar bonded permanently into the shaft's rear end, presenting a uniform surface and throat depth for the pin or press-fit nock to seat against. Easton, Gold Tip, and Victory all ship their target shafts with factory-installed bushings. On shafts that arrive without them, the archer installs the bushing with a dab of epoxy and a press tool.
Installation on a bare shaft requires the bushing to be sized for the shaft's inner diameter. Bushing sizes are shaft-family-specific — an Easton X10 bushing will not fit a Gold Tip Kinetic Hunter without modification. Once the correctly-sized bushing is confirmed, clean the rear ID of the shaft with alcohol, apply a small amount of two-part epoxy to the bushing's outer surface, and press it fully flush with the shaft's rear end using a flat-bottomed pin punch or the factory installation tool. Allow full cure time before loading a nock.
Bushing replacement is technically possible but practically difficult. If a bushing cracks — usually from a hard dry-fire or a direct rear impact — the damaged bushing must be drilled out carefully without enlarging or damaging the shaft's ID. The drill diameter must match the bushing's OD closely. After removal, a new bushing can be installed. Most archers retire the shaft rather than attempt drilling, because the risk of ruining a $15–30 target shaft while attempting to save a $1 bushing is rarely worth it. An exception is high-end aluminum-carbon shafts where the shaft cost justifies the attempt.
On micro-diameter carbon shafts, bushings are not optional — they are structurally required. The ID of a micro-diameter shaft is too small to accept any press-fit nock directly; the only path to a usable nock seat is a bushing that steps the interior geometry up to the correct nock pin or press-fit dimension. This is why micro-diameter shafts universally ship with factory-installed bushings or are only available in configurations where the nock system is an integral part of the shaft specification.
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Common questions
- What does a bushing actually do for my arrow?
- A bushing protects the rear edge of the carbon shaft and standardizes the surface that the nock seats against. Without it, the raw carbon ID takes the full snap-load of nocking and un-nocking repeatedly, which gradually chips the edge and produces inconsistent nock fit. The bushing absorbs that wear, keeps the nock throat engagement consistent from shot to shot, and protects the shaft so pin nocks can be replaced indefinitely without replacing the shaft itself.
- Can I replace a damaged bushing?
- It is possible but involves drilling out the old bushing without enlarging the shaft ID — a step that requires the right drill diameter, a steady hand, and a drill press for accuracy. The risk is real: enlarging the ID by even a few thousandths of an inch makes the new bushing a loose fit that will require shimming or force a shaft retirement anyway. For entry-level or mid-range carbon shafts, retiring the shaft is the practical answer. For premium shafts (Easton X10, Gold Tip Airstrike), the cost-benefit of a careful drill-out is more favorable.
- Do all carbon arrows have bushings?
- Most modern target arrows ship with factory-installed bushings. Standard-diameter hunting arrows may or may not have them depending on the nock system used — some are designed for direct press-fit nocks and do not need a separate bushing. Micro-diameter shafts always require bushings because their ID is too small for any direct nock engagement. If you are building arrows from bare shafts, check the manufacturer's nock system specifications to confirm whether a bushing must be installed before the shaft can accept a nock.