looking at getting some vpa terminator broadheads in 125gr to go on Easton powerflights with a 50gr brass insert. has anyone had any experience with these broadheads and is it better to use a 175gr head or use a 125gr head with a 50 gr insert to get the right spine?
I like the longer profile broadheads, so I would use the 175. I personally use the 200. Either head behind the shoulder of a game animal will work so it is really a matter of your preferance.
I have shot the 175 and love them. I have not shot the 125. I personally would go with the 175 if possible to get the longer more 3 to 1 profile and non-vented. I think that is a better way to go, but I would still give the 125 a go if it came down to needing that weight.
Are you talking about a 175 screw in vs. a 125 glue on with a 50 gr. adaptor? Or are you talking about the difference between a 50 gr. brass insert or standard insert for a carbon arrow? Aluminum inserts still have weight.
Once you go heavy on BH's you'll never use a 125 again.
Yea I have used heavy before on my savannah and hill bow. I need around 175 up front per the calculator with the arrows I want to use for my 45# grizzly giving me a 10.1gpi and a Foc of around 13% witch will be a great fast hard hitting arrow out of a 45# bow. so was thinking if I went a 50gr brass insert I could use a 125gr head or use a 25gr alloy insert with 150 but i like the idea of being able to use 125gr head as it is very readaly available and could switch heads very easily If I want small game heads ect. is there any difference in having 50gr insert and 125gr head to having 25gr insert and 150gr head? And has anyone used the sorter fat looking 125gr terminators I think they look really nice.
If you're gonna be a bear, be a Grizzly Bear.
Not sure what that means exactly, but I like the way it sounds.
Ive used the 175s and 200s. I like the longer head (3:1 ish).
If you are shooting close shots the heavy head will not mean much as long as your spine can take it. If you are a longer distance shooter... you'll have alot more elevation to account for in your shot.
Use the calculator with caution. Make sure to work down to what you need to account for variables, which can't be always calculated. I find that there is a small, but noticeable difference between a longer shaft and shorter shaft with different point weight and the same calculated dynamic spine. I also find a small, but noticeable difference between a heavy head out front of a light insert and a light head in front of heavy inserted. Something about shifting the mass of the front end weight forward and back. Nothing that can't be worked out with some length variation in the shaft, but it will be a little different even though the calculator says they are the same. Different inserts also have different lengths and cause a small footing effect or small flexible shaft length change.
Oh, and I also get your point on the 125 gr. point. I think the same way about being able to get a whole pile of different heads that weight. When I got back into trad a little more seriously I was determined to work out an arrow with a 125 gr. point. It is not hard to go to about any archer shop here and get some kind of cut on contact 125 gr. head. Now I don't worry about that. I just try to get a great flying arrow with a real good head I can use over and over again. The VPA is a seriously hard core BH in the solid design. Not sure how the vented holds up.
I second what "Big Sexy" said! His arrow quite easily blew through his bear..... obviously a good set-up!
The longer 175 gr. (or even heavier) is never a bad choice!
I'm in the homestretch on tuning my 51#@30. My 5575s got too short and will only push 125 grains so I stepped up to 7795s and they're too stiff with 175 grains, so I've ordered 200 and 250 gr points this a.m. from Kustom King...
Where I hope to wind up with is 200 grain terminators. Easy to sharpen, tough, quiet. 3:1.
Yeah, "Big Sexy" I've never shot a broadhead or arrow this heavy, and as part of my dailies I start at 5 yards and shoot a single arrow every 5 yards out to 40 and out there I'm really lobbing them. Like mortar shells and that's with the 175s. Can't wait to see what they do with a buick bumper bolted on the front.
QuoteOriginally posted by PaddyMac:
Where I hope to wind up with is 200 grain terminators. Easy to sharpen, tough, quiet. 3:1.
:thumbsup:
QuoteOriginally posted by PaddyMac:
Can't wait to see what they do with a buick bumper bolted on the front.
:biglaugh:
VPA makes an incredible 3 blade head and I can't wait to test their 2 blade as well.
If you use the right inserts you can add weight behind the insert and use the same weight head on any bow, though non vented and longer should work better IMHO.
I would bet that the beauty of shooting the 125 (having many potential heads to choose from) becomes null and void once you shoot the VPA because your search for perfection will be over. Solid head machined from tool steel...nothin finer...
Thanks for the info guys alot of people are talking about vented heads I'm pretty shore the 125gr is soild it's only the 100gr head that is vented but yes it is much shorter than the heavier heads. I completely understand about the whole heavy arrow but I'm only shooting these out of a 45# grizzly is it too much wieght to go up in spine and add say 200Gr up front? I would think 10.1gpi and 13%Foc would be a good allrounder witch for my draw length on a 400 spine shaft means I need 175gr upfront. or should I go with a 300spine and go up in wieght even more, do these bows like to shoot heavy arrows and will loosing alot of speed and not gaining much K/E be worth it?
I've just ordered some vpa terminators in 150gr to go in standard 21gr alloy inserts on a eastern powerflight 400 shaft full length 31.5" with vanes yes vanes 3x4" should give me 9.9gpi and 13+% Foc with good speed and K/E @my 29.5" draw out of my new 2011 bear grizzly 45#@28" with an elevated rest. I think they will take down our fallow, hog and sambar deer,pigs and goats no worries. And should be a good wetweather/allrounder for my working mans bow.
What weight are you pulling? what is your draw length ?
45# @ 28" and my draw is 29.5" mate
Sounds like you can get where you need to be with some cutting or side plate adjustments.
You are right about the 125 VPA being solid. I mix them up with the WW Elite. The WW is vented in 125.
yea i haved worked it out so if i want to change from vanes to feathers i can just chop some length of the arrow to get it back up to correct spine and i think i will be pretty spot on with the calculations the stu calculator has never let me down has been spot on for me each time ive made an arrow up so far. and the grizzly is cut past center so it should be pretty spine tolerable compared to what im use to tuning my hill bow.
yea i was getting confused for a bit there myself i had to get on there web site again, but no matter as i ordered 150gr so they are a little longer so should be better.
cheers
Terminators are the ticket. I had them make some extra, extra large heads for me in the same style. Love the way they fly and sharpen. They are also tougher than woodpecker lips!
bigjim
:biglaugh: Oh Jimmy! I would like to discuss that one over a campfire with you someday.
One of the bears shot in Quebec last week was shot with a terminator. Complete pass-through.
I've got some of the 'special run' 1 and 1/4 inchers...haven't used them yet...but hope to run once through a SC Hog soon.
Curt Cabrera has killed a few hogs with them.
Also hope to run my Big Jim 1 and a halfer through a deer this year.
Shooting the 175 screw in (w 100 grain insert) and 190 grain glue on and like both. Shot a bear this past fall, one arrow, decent blood trail (went clean thru, top to bottom) and bear at the end of about a 50 - 60 yard trail. I actually watched it go down so the trail was not needed.
and they are affordable.
So far. . so good
ChuckC