In general thats true…but I’ve seen cases with poor flying arrows and big mech heads on light arrows that did hit in the right spot…they just didn’t have the Uumph.Its always shot placement, no matter what the other reasons are.
Penetration is number 2 to shot placemat in overall losses though i’d bet?In general thats true…but I’ve seen cases with poor flying arrows and big mech heads on light arrows that did hit in the right spot…they just didn’t have the Uumph.
Yeah, i guess thats true. In my case, there has never been an arrow that left my bow after an elk with an arrow like that. But i admit, I have hit a few deer with mechs and light arrows. They still died, but only if i hit the right spot. Otherwise they ran off with my arrow and got away. LOLIn general thats true…but I’ve seen cases with poor flying arrows and big mech heads on light arrows that did hit in the right spot…they just didn’t have the Uumph.
For me it has always been either shot placement or ballistics. Everyone knows shot placement, but I have learned that my shot placement changes depending on distance and bullet speed.When you have lost an animal, what is the most common cause? I'm trying to get an actual gauge of what the most common problem is. Select as many times as you've lost an animal.
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I lost a bull with a montec head. Broadside shot at 40 yards, did not pass through. Looked a little high but I was uphill. Looked for 3 days and then the next week with no luck. It happens. I have since gone with a heavier arrow and different broadhead. Last bull was very close to the same shot placement but with full pass through. He went 60 yards.I have lost 3 bulls with what I would have considered 10 ring double lung shots. I'm going to get haters for admitting this but I can say with 100% certainty they were all 3 double lung broadside shots that should have resulted in dead elk within just a few yards. And yes I looked and looked and looked and had help looking. You say "if they were double lung shots they would have died immediately". Well thats what I thought too.
1 of them I found 3 days later 1.24 miles from where I shot him. Absolute needle in a haystack luck that we even found him. Fixed blade broadhead intact and stuck in an offside rib. Similar elevation but sidehilled around 3 ridges.
One of them I found 7 days later 800 yards away, up hill 600 yards and 200 yards down the back side of a ridge. Devoured with no sign of an arrow or broadhead.
One of them I never found.
3 Very odd situation that I really have no explanation for. Shuttle t lock and montec heads going about 285. Weird deals.
Im not really sure what to attribute that to. When something like that happens I like to look for what went wrong so as to learn a lesson from it. When you stick an elk right where you aim and get good penetration and it takes off and you cant find it, its one of the most frustrating things i've encountered. You feel like you did everything right and you dont know where you fell short. Just one of those things I guess. Im telling you these 3 instances were perfect shots, there was no second guessing on placement or penetration. With archery equipment I dont aim for the heart I aim for a clean double lung. The most recent was a big 6x7 broadside at 23 yards. I saw the arrow hit its mark clear as day.I lost a bull with a montec head. Broadside shot at 40 yards, did not pass through. Looked a little high but I was uphill. Looked for 3 days and then the next week with no luck. It happens. I have since gone with a heavier arrow and different broadhead. Last bull was very close to the same shot placement but with full pass through. He went 60 yards.