Augie
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2022
- Messages
- 253
So I have tested and used dozens of different broadheads both fixed and mechanicals over the years. Over the past year I have used Sevr Titanium 2.0 broadheads and finally had enough of these heads. I preface this by saying the Sevr's are razor sharp out of the box, fly great, love the practice mode option, and from the 3 deer I killed with these heads the blood trails are awesome.
The cons in my opinion outweigh the pros. The issues I have with the Sevr's are that the titanium ferrule is extremely long, easily deploys in your quiver when moving through brush, deadfall, when pulling your bow up into a tree, etc. and replacing the blades is the biggest pain in the butt. The ferrules are so long it makes my arrows stick out past the cam of my bow (tight spot quiver is maxed out on height so cant move it up any further) so when I pull it up a tree with a bow rope the nocks dig into the ground and the brief pressure causes some of the heads to deploy. If you put any pressure on the tip of the ferrule to the hood of your quiver they will deploy and you can't just easily reset the blades since they lock, so going through deadfall or brush can be a huge pain and you'll need to carry a bunch of extra heads just in case. Replacing the blades after shooting an animal or resetting them after deploying in the quiver requires a small allen wrench and I have the hardest time getting the blades aligned properly then getting the small washer in place between the blades. It took me about 30-40 minutes to replace a single set of blades at my work bench, for me it would be nearly impossible to do in the field. Perhaps its just my fat fingers, but if I can't easily replace/reset blades when they easily deploy in your quiver it just becomes a nightmare. Several other people I have spoken to who use these heads have the same issues. It's disappointing these broadheads which perform so well in the perfect circumstance have so many downfalls to where I can't use them anymore.
The cons in my opinion outweigh the pros. The issues I have with the Sevr's are that the titanium ferrule is extremely long, easily deploys in your quiver when moving through brush, deadfall, when pulling your bow up into a tree, etc. and replacing the blades is the biggest pain in the butt. The ferrules are so long it makes my arrows stick out past the cam of my bow (tight spot quiver is maxed out on height so cant move it up any further) so when I pull it up a tree with a bow rope the nocks dig into the ground and the brief pressure causes some of the heads to deploy. If you put any pressure on the tip of the ferrule to the hood of your quiver they will deploy and you can't just easily reset the blades since they lock, so going through deadfall or brush can be a huge pain and you'll need to carry a bunch of extra heads just in case. Replacing the blades after shooting an animal or resetting them after deploying in the quiver requires a small allen wrench and I have the hardest time getting the blades aligned properly then getting the small washer in place between the blades. It took me about 30-40 minutes to replace a single set of blades at my work bench, for me it would be nearly impossible to do in the field. Perhaps its just my fat fingers, but if I can't easily replace/reset blades when they easily deploy in your quiver it just becomes a nightmare. Several other people I have spoken to who use these heads have the same issues. It's disappointing these broadheads which perform so well in the perfect circumstance have so many downfalls to where I can't use them anymore.
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