Haven't you learned by now Motown??........EVERY thread is secretly about him
Let's see if we can't help this guy with his question instead of criticizing his choices............what a novel idea
I am a big fan of COC heads.........penetration and tissue damage are all you want and need from a broadhead. Any broadhead out there should fly accurately enough out of a well tuned bow (some are better though in my experience).........and if you are shopping for broadheads because you want it to smash through bones then your priorities are in the wrong place. It's much easier to practice and take good shots in the field then to hope your head wins the battle vs heavy bone. Without a doubt in my mind more often then not you will lose that battle...........pretty much a long winded way of saying don't shoot them in the freakin' shoulder or spine.........accidents and bad shots happen but no matter what head you have on in those situations the odds are not in your favor.
For COC heads I would recommend Magnus Stingers first. They are tried and true heads that have a LONG standing history of excellence. They fly great........not good........GREAT. They are wicked sharp and they leave BIG holes (notice the plural) and gory blood trails. They make an 85 grain head in both the Stinger and Buzzcutt (serrated). The best thing about them is you can replace the blades.......practice all you want then just put in fresh blades are you are scalpel sharp and ready to roll.
SteelForce would be my next choice.........They are VERY sharp and fly almost as well as the Stingers. They are very tough and do a TON of damage.........ONLY downside IMO is you can't replace the blades. Great head and also comes in 85 grain.
I am going to try the G5 Strikers and Shuttle T-Locks this year as well but I don't know if they come in 85gr.
One thing about COC heads that gets lost in the mix sometimes is the importance of a pass through. If you get a pass through your chances of successfully tracking that deer go up exponentially IMO. Getting a pass through should be every hunters #1(b) goal.......with #1(a) being a well placed shot. 2 holes spraying blood makes a WORLD of difference in the woods especially from a tree stand when the angle of entry is sometimes pretty steep..........1 hole near the top of a deer's back is not gonna leave you a lot of sign to follow........you will be following drops (if that) instead of splashes and sprays. My brother shot a deer last year and made a perfect kill shot BUT it hit the opposite shoulder and never came out...........we found that deer by good visual recall by my brother and following tracks in the mud.........there was 1 drop of blood on the whole trail about half way down and then nothing until about 10 yards before he piled up. I honestly believe if that situation happened to someone (or a group) that had limited or no tracking experience the deer would have been lost.
My best friends bow is a snail..........about 218 fps and he shoots SteelForce heads through deer like a hot knife through butter. Getting a clean passthrough at those speeds says a lot about a heads sharpness and penetration ability.
Take into account if replacing the blades is important to you and then narrow your choice that way to start.
Good Luck