Trad Gang
Main Boards => PowWow => Topic started by: Highlandwarrior on January 06, 2010, 10:37:00 PM
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Besides he obvious Bear greenies what do you think were the best old broadheads and why? Tough to beat the Bears rep. but lets here what you think. Also please give the weight of the head.
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Pearson Deadheads either 125 or 135 were pretty deadly.
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There were a lot of weirdo BH'b in years gone by. Zwickeys have been great since the 1940's. Good steel, easy to sharpen-typical weight has been 125 grains. The profile is just right for max penetration.
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I knew that was coming!
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Greenies, was there another broadhead?
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Back in the day all i ever use was Zwickey and MA-3's
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Zwickey I've used them since 1960 and their still at the top of my list
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I have to go with Ace and Zwickey. Others have come and gone, but these two companies have stood the test of time. I'd have as much confidence hunting with 50-year-old Ace or Zwickey heads as I do with their current offerings. As a matter of fact, I killed a doe last year with a 1946 Ace Hi-Speed with the old parallel tube ferrule.
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Hard to argue with the old Zwickeys.
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Zwickey
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I have some Snuffers that are about 30 years old.
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Zwickey 125 with 40-100 insert.But any scary sharp broadhead is a favorite.
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Ol Pearson Switchblades... they were great - still have a couple of dozen kicking around.
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Its interesting that there are new heads out that reseble the Pearson Deadheads..... (no, I didn't say copy). Seems we have again gone in a circle.
BobW
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Zwickey 125gr
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The Pearson Deadhead was nasty & cut a huge hole. We called them whistlers or spade blades...
Pearson also made a greenie clone called the Switchblade that was available in several cool & hip 70's colors. The bleeder setup wasn't as good as a Razorheads so we just shot them as 2 blades...
We all loved Zwickeys, but none of us could afford them. I actually own a couple now, and can't even remember where I got them. Must be Old Timer's Disease...
Remember when you could go to Coast To Coast Hardware or Woolworth's and buy single Bear cedar arrows with 5" helical feathers, .$75 for the glued on field points, $1.25 for them with Razorheads? And how they didn't even blink about selling those Razorhead tipped arrows to us kids spending our carefully hoarded lawn mowing & gopher tail bounty money?
I still have a scar on my thumb that splits open a couple times a year, courtesy of sharpening one of those Razorhead tipped cedars with that little plastic handled pull sharpener Bear sold. Snapped in two on the pull and ran my thumb down the blade while pushing down so it would get really sharp... :eek:
Remember the Browning Serpentine from the mid 70's, and the magazine ad with the big figure 8 hole through the apple? Young guys, picture a vented Magnus 2 blade, with the blades spiraling around the body and welded at the bottom on the opposite side of the top! About impossible to sharpen and I think it would have taken 100# to actually drive that thing through a deer, but it sure looked cool!!!!
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Ace and Zwickey. Been around for ever in basically the same configuration. They have both stood the test of time.
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Another nod for the Ace and Zwickey. :thumbsup: I'm still using them.
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There were a ton of really neat old broadheads created in our recent history. Several books are in print with photos of them. Wade Philips created a series of books that show pictures, give descriptions and some background on many many heads that were made. You would really be surprised at the looks of some of them. O M G
There are a few that are still around, almost unchanged. Zwickey is one of them. Certain designs just stand up to time and use. Others didn't make it, for a variety of reasons.
I really wish someone still made the Butterfield Brute. I really like the way it looks and the few that I own get about the sharpest of any of my "use" heads.
ChuckC
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Chuck: As I read your post, I got to thinking about the Butterfield Brutes, before I even saw that you had mentioned them. They were monster heads! I still have a half dozen Pearson Switchblades and a three pack of Deadheads with the package marked 130 grains.
Joe
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Joe, they make a real nice hole.
ChuckC
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Howard Hill's anyone?
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Zwickey
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The old Bears! Still have some in the package. The Grizzlys for durable,and I mean you cant break them! cant be beat .
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definitely deadheads, They are some mean broadheads. there is one place I know who makes a repro called the dreadhead, but they are out of operation until spring. The vintage deadhead is surely one of the iconic broadheads of trad bowhuntnig in my mind.
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Zwickey Delta 2 blade!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Hill broadheads. I have used them before and they are great. Get them from Howard Hill Archery or 3Rivers.
If they were good enough for Howard, whos to argue!
Can you tell I am a Howard Hill fan? LOL
Joshua
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I had forgot about the old Browning serpentine advertisement cutting a hole through an apple.
I'll go with the Zwickey Delta 2-blade.
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I love the deadheads and have six that i use today. For modern heads the simmons heads are my pick
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I echo Bjorn, Zwickey Eskies and Deltas and all their minor spot weld variations over the years are about as classic as you can get. I would also add, that Jack is one of the nicest guys a person could meet.
Kris