How do you guys keep em sharp or isn't it a problem? Gonna deer hunt this year with one and just wanna make sure I'm up to par on sharpness
Broadhead covers tied together and in the quiver with your arrow BHs inserted into them.
I never had any problems, though, with not using them. Just be careful when replacing a BH arrow back into the quiver so as not to rake the cutting edge against the back edge of another BH arrow already in there.
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Broad heads like Deadheads will have more edge contact to each other than heads like Hills or Grizzlies. The Schulz answer would simply be, "with a file, how do you keep yours sharp.".
I use 2 blade heads and have covers on them all the time. Heads hold an edge pretty well through the season. I do touch them up once in a while as the season progresses.
I just put them in my quiver and sharpen when needed which isn't all that often.
There are broad head booties that folks have used for ages. Depending on the angle of your head, I believe effects just how bad they'd dull. I think there's some angle work that's beyond my math skills. I use hill heads or zwickeys and never had a big problem. For most heads, regular maintenance is part and parcel anyway, so even if your slightly dulling them up on a long hunt involving a lot of movement, you'll be touching them up regardless.
I put a piece of foam in the bottom of my back quiver for them to push into and don't have to much of a problem. They only dull from pulling out and inserting dragging against the leather or when I hit dirt.
Take several hunting arrows and roll them around in your hands. The cutting edges can't possibly touch each other. The only way they might get dull is putting them in or out of the quiver. Just be careful and you will not have a problem.
Yup push into foam in the bottom. Even rattling around they don't really get bad very quickly with a quiver that is designed correctly and broken in if necessary.
"How do you guys keep em sharp?"
With a File.
A well designed and broken in quiver will hold your arrows securely. Touch them up every now and then and go hunting. Simple....it is beauty.
No need for anything in the bottom then perhaps a small piece of carpet to protect and quiet when you drop arrows in and that is really not needed either.
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The only "bootie" I use hunting is to put mine on the ground occasionally.
All the other advice is spot on. If I can add dont mix other arrows when hunting. Meaning dont put blunts or stumping arrows in quiver with broadheads. True story. My friend and I were hunting TX for javi when we got into a small sounder and pigs were poping out of the brush all around us. One steps out at 15yds my friend draws from his back quiver as pruty as Howard and sends the arrow perfect. Thump and the arrow bounces back. That javi grunts and takes off like shot out of a cannon. We walk over pick up the arrow and sure enough he had 12 broadheads and one rubber blunt in his quiver and pulled the blunt. We still laugh about it, good fun for us but not for that poor bruised javelina.
Haha Jack Skinner, that'd be heart breaking. My back quiver has a strip of leather lacing at the top that keeps the opening closed narrower and also divides it into 2 section. On the one side goes my broadheads, and 2 stumpers go on the other side of the divider. That makes it so if i want a bunny buster I have to actually reach back further to grab it.
I flip my small game heads point up in my quiver.there rubber blunts so no safety issues and I know if I grab the right arrow.
Jack Skinner's story is the hunting equivalent of catch and release. Funny!
My buddy pulled and nocked two Judos in a row from his back quiver with a buck watching him only 10yd from his tree stand. Finally, on his third attempt he pulled a broadhead. With incredible shakes he managed to take the shot.
Missed clean. :)
I have never had an issue with broadheads dulling in a back quiver. I have used back quivers exclusively for.... I cant even count that high.
I do stuff a piece of sheepskin in the bottom, or even a cloth to give them something to sink into. But after a season, I'll pull out the couple of shafts that have never been shot and can still shave with them. Nonetheless, I always throw a carbide sharpener across them before stashing them for winter.
I put a bunch of pine needles in the bottom of the quiver to keep arrows quiet. Some have told me to put cedar chips in the bottom as well.
I wouldn't put anything in that holds moisture.
Thanks for all the advice fellas
Now I just gotta wait om deer season :)
"Yoga Blocks" cut to fit quiver,glue in and just push arrows down enough to remove easily and don't rattle.