Product Details
Fletch-Tite Platinum™ 946.4 ml Adhesive by Bohning®. Fletch-Tite Platinum™ has been the industry standard for over 70 years, and is still the archery industry's most flexible and durable adhesive! Its flexible bond absorbs shock and won't crack or become brittle after repeated target impacts. Fletch-Tite™ Platinum is a solvent-based glue designed for vanes, feathers, and swedged nocks, and it's perfect for securing the tip & tail of vanes & feathers. It works on all shaft types but is especially recommended for carbon and wood. And clean-up is so easy - excess glue can simply be scraped off with a fingernail. The recommended clamp time is 5 minutes, and cure time is 24 hours (48 hours if environment is humid).
Specifications
Volume: 946.4 ml |
Type: Adhesive |
Features
- Solvent-based glue designed for vanes, feathers and swedged nocks
- Works on carbon, aluminum, wood, fiberglass, wraps and painted shafts
- Clamp time 5 minutes, cure time 24-48 hours
- The archery industry's most flexible and durable glue
- Industry standard for over 70 years
The Bohning® Company was founded in 1946 by Rollin Bohning. He was a research chemist and avid archer who had become dissatisfied with the cements available to bond broadheads to hunting shafts. He developed Ferr-L-Tite® adhesive for adhering hardware to wood and aluminum shafts. The product formulation has undergone several changes over the decades, but Ferr-L-Tite® is still the industry standard today. Throughout the late 1940s and early 1950s, Rollin Bohning continued to develop successful solutions for archers, including Doug Easton and Fred Bear, with whom he had become friends. Their collaboration led to the development of Bohning Fletch-Tite Platinum® fletching cement, a product so effective that nearly every archer has used it since its inception. In the early 1970s, Rollin Bohning semi-retired from the growing company, and Colby and Martha Johnson became chief administrators. They guided the company throughout the 1970s and most of the 1980s. Larry Griffith became president of the company in 1987 when the Johnsons semi-retired.