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Anyone Try These Broad Heads???

Started by Bacote Kid, September 28, 2013, 12:41:00 AM

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Bacote Kid

These look like they may be good for whitetails n such. They are offered in a single bevel with a bleeder of approx 5/8ths of an inch. They are only offered in 100 and 125 tho.  

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Bob Lee Heavy Weight. Burled Bubinga/Black Micarta 55# @ 28". 58"

dagwood64

Wouldn't the bleeders interfere with the cutting rotation of the single bevel?
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Bacote Kid

Yes it would. But I would only be worried about it on critters bigger or tougher than Whitetails. I think it would possibly be a little better that a straight double bevel. Maybe.
Bob Lee Heavy Weight. Burled Bubinga/Black Micarta 55# @ 28". 58"

Alexander Traditional

The ones in the picture look like a double bevel.

ChuckC

If they hold up (they probably will ) they look like they should work fine, especially on deer sized critters.  I don't think it would matter what bevel you got, but Dagwood's comment is a good one.

ChuckC

Wallis Wetzel

I checked the website and they mention both single and double-bevel heads available, and that the double-bevel are the ones shown.
Great Northern Ghost: 68#@28"
Great Northern Traditional LB: 64#@28"
Northern Mist Baraga: 57#@28" (coming)
Big River longbow: 40#@24"
Japanese Yumi: 35#@36"

JimB

The bleeder,being forward could help open up a wound channel but I could also see it hindering penetration on some bone hits,even thinner bones.

JamesKerr

They look like good heads for deer sized game and small hogs. What grain weight are they?
James Kerr

longrifle

The vents are angled forward,that would cause to much resistance.Just stick with a good old non- vented 2blade.
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Ray Hammond

single bevels would only be sharpened on one side of a face- these are sharpened on both sides of the same plane, so I don't think they're single bevel.
"Courageous, untroubled, mocking and violent-that is what Wisdom wants us to be. Wisdom is a woman, and loves only a warrior." - Friedrich Nietzsche

SilentT


SilentT

And they are available in single bevel with a right grind right now.

They have been great on huge animals.  I shot an Eland with one as well as numerous kudu and wildebeest.

r-man

It looks like a steep angle, I think a longer and narrower head for me, like the old Hill heads
Randy

Bacote Kid

QuoteOriginally posted by SilentT:
And they are available in single bevel with a right grind right now.

They have been great on huge animals.  I shot an Eland with one as well as numerous kudu and wildebeest.
Awesome. I know that the bleeder may not be desirable to alotta folks. But I was thinking just on whitetail size critters and all these free range exotics in Texas such as black buck that winding wound channel with that bleeder would cause alot of lung destruction. Obviously on larger criiter I would take the bleeder out.
Bob Lee Heavy Weight. Burled Bubinga/Black Micarta 55# @ 28". 58"

bowtough

They look like Silverflames with a bleeder. Better idea would be for the bleeder to trail. Think I would pass. How much?


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