Great article on Broadhead sharpness
#1
Nontypical Buck
Thread Starter
Join Date: Feb 2003
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Posts: 2,994
Great article on Broadhead sharpness
Posted by Derbytown over at AT-
http://www.buckmasters.com/Buckmaste...arpFactor.html
I'm thinking about emailing this to Rocket...
http://www.buckmasters.com/Buckmaste...arpFactor.html
I'm thinking about emailing this to Rocket...
#3
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: East Yapank NY USA
Posts: 3,457
RE: Great article on Broadhead sharpness
I have seen white-tailed deer survive center lung shots, and in one case, even a center heart shot, because the broadheads used weren’t shaving sharp. You may think that I’m assuming that those heart- and lung-shot deer survived, but I’m not. In the case of the center lung-shot animal, it was killed by an automobile two years after it was shot through the lungs with a dull broadhead. The broadhead and 10 inches of the shaft were still in the buck, positioned right in the center of his lungs. His wound had healed completely, and he seemed to be in otherwise perfect health when the car hit and killed him. He was butterball fat, too. The heart-shot doe was shot later by a rifle hunter, also two years after an arrow passed through the center of her heart. She too was healthy and fat, showing no evidence of ills due to the 6-inch section of aluminum shaft still in the center of her heart. In both cases, dull broadheads failed to do their jobs. There was minimal hemorrhaging, and both animals survived. Shot placement is critical in bowhunting, but unless your broadhead is shaving sharp, a perfectly placed arrow may not get the job done.
Maybe the double lunger - but NOT the center punched heart................Sorry
#5
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location:
Posts: 61
RE: Great article on Broadhead sharpness
I agree good article and you should never take for granted that factory blades are sharp. I personally don't like mech's. But does anyone know of a comparison between the cut on contact broadheads, fixed, and I guess the mech's. I'am talking about studies that when it comes deer bleeding out without being aware that they been hit.
#6
RE: Great article on Broadhead sharpness
I argee with Rack , on the 2 senarios , but there is merit to the rest of what this guy says . I to have shot an animal with a scary sharp magnus , at 10 yards ,and wondered if I missed , because all it did was lift its head , and keep walking slowly , for about 10 yards that is , where it layed down and died . Perfect double lung shot .
#7
RE: Great article on Broadhead sharpness
ORIGINAL: Rangeball
I'm thinking about emailing this to Rocket...
I'm thinking about emailing this to Rocket...
Love the heads, but Rocket, IME is not a very "friendly" company. I've seen some return emails they have sent to folks, and they were downright rude. [:@]
#8
RE: Great article on Broadhead sharpness
Photo: The Stirling Sharpener, the author’s favorite device for establishing the angle of the blade (21 degrees per side, 42 degrees overall), is the first tool used in his three-step sharpening process
#9
RE: Great article on Broadhead sharpness
In the case of the center lung-shot animal, it was killed by an automobile two years after it was shot through the lungs with a dull broadhead.
#10
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: East Yapank NY USA
Posts: 3,457
RE: Great article on Broadhead sharpness
Would that mean that an expandable just scares the living sh!t out of a deer causing them to run further?
So I would say they do not "scare" deer into running further