You would be more comfortable with a fixed blade?Put it in the right place it would.
I wouldn't hunt with that arrow, but it will kill stuff.
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I like my elk arrow to be 450-500 grains, and I prefer a fixed 2 blade with bleeders. But I do carry a couple sevrs in my quiver in case a situation presents itself where I think that would work the best.You would be more comfortable with a fixed blade?
I hear you. I think I’ll stick with a fixed blades. I was just worried how differential my shot would be from a field point to a fixed blade. This will be my first archery mule hunt so I know it’s possible my distance could be a little stretched compared to elk. I’m shooting the rip tko gamers 8.7 cut at 27”I like my elk arrow to be 450-500 grains, and I prefer a fixed 2 blade with bleeders. But I do carry a couple sevrs in my quiver in case a situation presents itself where I think that would work the best.
It takes a lot of energy to open some mechanical heads. And generally, the metals and construction of them are nowhere near what some fixed blades are made out of. I want that arrow to enter, stay sharp, and travel completely through the animal. All of those are very possible with the mechanical, and there are tons of successful hunters that use them. They have their place. But the likelihood of failure goes up with mechanical heads, so I like to eliminate possible points of failure. I would prefer the failure to be myself, rather than equipment.
So your arrow set up is not wrong. It will work. But for me, there are some limitations with it that make me uncomfortable.
Having a light fast arrow makes that arrow trajectory super flat. Eliminating some variance for missing high/low. But in my experience, most elk killed with a bow are fairly close. 60 yards would be fairly far, with the average probably being closer to 25-30 yards.
There is also the durability consideration. Not sure what arrow you are shooting, but usually the really light arrows are fairly fragile. And although they are very accurate, they will break much easier than a standard arrow.
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You can eliminate this concern by tuning your bow.I was just worried how differential my shot would be from a field point to a fixed blade.
Like it's been said above, a properly tuned bow will shoot field points with fixed blades. At distance, often the fixed blades hit slightly low due to the extra drag of the fixed blade, but it's minimal. You have plenty of time to get that figured out. It usually only takes me one s session to confirm.I hear you. I think I’ll stick with a fixed blades. I was just worried how differential my shot would be from a field point to a fixed blade. This will be my first archery mule hunt so I know it’s possible my distance could be a little stretched compared to elk. I’m shooting the rip tko gamers 8.7 cut at 27”
I’m shooting an alpha x 30 27.5 inch draw length at #67 pounds. I was running 294 fps with a 350 grain arrow. I was just doing an educated guess for 288 fps if I gained some grains on the arrowI personally would not shoot that arrow and BH setup but thats me.
@Css1113 I'm curious to your setup though.
288fps with a 360gr arrow setup with a 70lb bow.
What bow, draw length and arrow are you shooting?
The only reason I ask is my V3X is at 70lbs with a 30" draw length is shooting a 460 gr arrow and is running 280fps.
Thank you I appreciate itLike it's been said above, a properly tuned bow will shoot field points with fixed blades. At distance, often the fixed blades hit slightly low due to the extra drag of the fixed blade, but it's minimal. You have plenty of time to get that figured out. It usually only takes me one s session to confirm.
If the fixed blades do not hit with field points, your bow either needs tuning, your spine is off or your form needs work.
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