johnsd16
WKR
Many probably know this, but the reason sharp wounds “bleed more freely” is that the cells that line the walls of arteries/arterioles, capillaries and to a lesser extent veins contain the proteins that trigger/promote the cascade of events that create a “clot”. Clots are a combination of proteins and also platelets. A very very sharp cut damages far fewer cells in the vessel it cuts than ripping it. Cutting someone’s arm off with a samurai sword is going to cause way more blood loss and for longer than getting the arm ripped off by a PTO shaft or using a chainsaw.
When I shoot a mammal with a bow I want two holes, as much bleeding as possible and for as long as possible. This helps by having more outlet for the blood, better chance at bilateral pneumothorax (collapsing both lungs), exsangunation, or at the very least ongoing bleeding that is able to be followed to a dead animal that traveled a distance or get a follow up shot. Dull broadheads may still kill, but not as fast or with as good a blood trail as sharp ones.
I like dull expandables for turkeys as I don’t want a pass through, they don’t leave a blood trail anyway, and I want the arrow to really “thump” them. Best for me is getting the broad head in the heart/lung cavity and have the head actually stay there with only about 4-6” or arrow in the bird. I shoot a lighter bow, lighter arrows that are FOC and heads dulled from practice or big game hits. In ID we can’t use expandables but in MN we could. Penetration can be a problem with wing feathers using expandables.
When I shoot a mammal with a bow I want two holes, as much bleeding as possible and for as long as possible. This helps by having more outlet for the blood, better chance at bilateral pneumothorax (collapsing both lungs), exsangunation, or at the very least ongoing bleeding that is able to be followed to a dead animal that traveled a distance or get a follow up shot. Dull broadheads may still kill, but not as fast or with as good a blood trail as sharp ones.
I like dull expandables for turkeys as I don’t want a pass through, they don’t leave a blood trail anyway, and I want the arrow to really “thump” them. Best for me is getting the broad head in the heart/lung cavity and have the head actually stay there with only about 4-6” or arrow in the bird. I shoot a lighter bow, lighter arrows that are FOC and heads dulled from practice or big game hits. In ID we can’t use expandables but in MN we could. Penetration can be a problem with wing feathers using expandables.