Here is my thought, since a single bevel head is supposed to cause rotation through dense flesh, wouldn't that actually be causing the arrow to loose energy that would be driving the arrow through the deer in that rotation? And also wouldn't you loose some energy at the initial contact since a tanto tip is not as sharp as a double beveled tip? I am also suspicious of the rotation supposedly causing the bone to split more than any other cut on contact tip since I don't think the rotation is powerful enough to do anything. As of right now I am considering switching to the Day 6 evo.
Recently I shot a quartering away buck @ 20 yards with a 550 grain arrow with a 150 grain cutthroat broadhead sharpened with 2000 grit sandpaper. I did not get a pass through, and the blood trail was lackluster. I did not recover the deer and I'm trying to figure out what happened. I also shot a deer last year at a severe quartering away position, I did get a complete pass through, but I could not find a drop of blood. I watched that deer go down so it was no big deal. As of right now I am considering switching to the Day 6 evo.
Recently I shot a quartering away buck @ 20 yards with a 550 grain arrow with a 150 grain cutthroat broadhead sharpened with 2000 grit sandpaper. I did not get a pass through, and the blood trail was lackluster. I did not recover the deer and I'm trying to figure out what happened. I also shot a deer last year at a severe quartering away position, I did get a complete pass through, but I could not find a drop of blood. I watched that deer go down so it was no big deal. As of right now I am considering switching to the Day 6 evo.