don't mind me
Boosting your post count? Or just adding weird posts?
Jeremy
don't mind me
Yep, killed several critters with them. Great heads.Anyone shooting Ace standards? They're tough and easy to sharpen.
Great post! I agree wholly. I pondered and compared all spring, and finally decided on shooting QAD Exodus 125s.
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100 or 125 grain version?I recently traveled down the elk broadhead rabbit hole.
I was very close to just buying the iron wills so i didn't have to think about it anymore, but kept getting hung up on my letting them get rusty or something.
After digging through as much as I could find online, I have decided that the 4blade kudupoint has the best balance for what I'm looking for with regards to durability/price/flight. The performance through steel plate in the Lusk videos on youtube is what sold me. Hopefully I send one through this season.
What about 312 FPS with a 390 grain arrow? Did the trick for me..I don’t claim to be anyone other than someone who loves to hunt, has been very fortunate bowhunting for elk and has shot a lot of elk with a compound bow. Each has come through hard work and luck, and each has taught me something about broadheads. I write this for the younger folks who are just getting started. You hear and read about cutting diameter, penetration tests, stainless blades, three blade versus four blade, chisel tip versus other tips - you name it and it is out there to debate. Here is where I come down on the issue and what is often over looked. Nothing is more important than shot placement, and by that I mean the ability to place the arrow and head where you aim and where it needs to hit. That doesn‘t mean I aimed at his ass. It glanced off a tree and hit him dead center in the lungs. It means I have the maximum confidence with by bow and this head, and can feel certain that I can hold my sight center of the lungs at 40 yards and hit the center of the lungs.
I am old enough to have hunted with the green two bladed bear broadheads and young enough to enjoy experimenting with new equipment each year. I don’t know of a single head on the market I have not shot. I am an accuracy junky who was on one of the original “manufactures teams” when 3-D targets first came out. What does that mean? Not much other than I am a respectable shot and been doing this a while.
My two most important factors when choosing a broadhead (my only two factors to be honest) are accuracy of the head and structural integrity of the head. If you put a sharp head through both lungs, an elk is not going far. End of story. It does not matter whether the head has a 1 inch diameter or a 12 inch diameter, but what does matter is that 1 inch head is aerodynamically superior to the 12 inch head.
So the best advise I can give a newbie is to buy a few packs of heads and see which shoots best for you. It will be an invaluable training experience. You get stronger. You gain confidence. You know what works best for you. For me, I prefer fixed blade heads with replaceable blades. Shoot the arrow and the head to see if it is accurate - replace blades before you hunt. Save old blades for practice in other heads, because you should have shot every arrow in you quiver before season and make sure it hits where it should hit. Although a lot of elk are taken each year with mechanical heads, they are best left for smaller game in my opinion.
For me this fall it will be a standard slick trick head riding enough kinetic energy to pass through an elk. Kinetic energy is for another day, but don‘t forget that 340 feet per second will not push a feather through a Gnat’s ass. There are a lot - and I mean a lot - of really good broadheads out there. So get outside during COVID-19 and shoot some!
Correct me if I'm wrong, 5mile, but you're also slinging those mechanicals with a drawlength that's damn near 3 feet long, with relatively heavy arrows, and with 70 lbs. Lots of folks aren't blessed with that kind of KE.A lot of heads will "kill" elk, but elk can cover a fair distance in a very short amount of time. In thick timber country, that means they can be out of sight immediately and running for 10+ seconds. Even if that's only 100 yards, if there's not a lot of blood on the ground that can be a horrible tracking job. I've been there and done that a few times. But I've never had to do that with a large cut mechanical.
Everyone has a different perspective and different experiences. Use what you're confident in.