Roksliding, I have to wonder if you are paying full price for your IW broadheads. It is one thing if you pay full price and quite another endorsement if you get them free or seriously discounted. Thanks
S30V has been used for years in the Solid broadheads. It's a proven steel for broadhead use. I'll put the sharpness of a GK up against any of these heads, and I've played around with them all, except for the DaySix heads.I've decided after my own personal experiences and research that going top-end with high quality components and broadheads is important to me. I'm making the switch this year to IW, Valkyrie, or Day Six. Out of a well tuned bow I can get almost broadhead to eventually fly well, although some are more forgiving than others. But toughness on hard bone impacts and edge retention can only come from better materials such as the A2 steel IW and S7 steel Valkyrie and Bishop use. Some back yard testing will determine if the S30V steel of the new Day Six heads is in the same league as the other heads previously mentioned. Good materials and heat treatments cost money, so naturally these will be more expensive to the consumer. I notice a huge difference in edge retention between the 440B steel of my German Kinetics and a standard 420 run of the mill broadhead. I expect that the premium heads listed above will be another step change improvement over the German Kinetics
The Slick Tricks are some of the noisiest heads I've ever shot. Are they effective? Yes. Are they in the same league as some of these new heads? Absolutely not. Trying to justify on price alone is futile, it leaves out too many other factors. Thankfully there are a million heads on the market now that guys can argue over, but also, it means there's a million choices that can be made.Bleeding is dependent on the wound an animal has. The factors that determine that are location and depth of the wound. What counts are the arteries/veins severed,. More and/or larger broadhead blades and sharpness help determine the wound. Broadheads kill by causing massive hemorrhaging.
Brand names and high prices do not kill the game.
I bought two dozen ss Slick Trick broadheads this winter for $17 per three pack. That is $136 for two dozen broadheads from MalWart. Personally I can see no reason to spent nearly $800 for the same number of broadheads that do not have as mush blade edge. Like you, I know the Slick Tricks well kill, and do it efficiently. They hold up well too.
My question is why would anyone spend $100 to get a pack of broadheads that will perform no better than a $17 ones? This is just my own opinion. It is your money.
S30V has been used for years in the Solid broadheads. It's a proven steel for broadhead use. I'll put the sharpness of a GK up against any of these heads, and I've played around with them all, except for the DaySix heads.
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Please watch the last minute of this video:I see a lot of discussion here about broadhead noise. I have shot a lot of elk over the years with fixed blade broadheads. Some were so nervous that they seemed to be spring loaded. Three I remember not getting. One jumped when a squirrel started chattering. Two bolted when they heads a slight squeak when I stared to draw the bow. Not one has ever showed any sign of being aware of broadhead sound, and I must have used 8 or 9 different types of broadheads in the time I have been hunting. I have not noticed Slick Tricks being noisy at all. For what it is worth.
I did a little calculating to see how significant BH noise might be. With my bow setup the arrow arrives at the elk standing 30 yards away right at 0.25 seconds after the sound of the bow gets there. The sound of the arrow and the bh itself are going to arrive even closer to the same time. Broadhead sound has never been a problem and I doubt is will be with a vented IW bh or a Slick Trick.