3rd Annual Broadhead Success Poll
#171
couger, that'll be great. I am new since Dec 2001, so I guess I didn't see what you did last year. It will be co0l to see the active number of members (from another thread) compared to kill ratio. Even though many have gotten more then one deer.
#175
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 3
Likes: 0
From: Pierceton IN USA
120 pound doe taken with Grim Reaper mechanical head. Complete pass through right behind the shoulder blade, only went 20 yards. Secon deer in a row with the new heads, they work great.
#177
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 277
Likes: 0
From: , IL USA
Slick Trick 100 gr.
Huge Entry & Massive Exit Wound.
Devastated 1 lung & took a bunch of fatty tissue with it on the exit.
"It's not the kill, it's the adventure and challenge! <img src=icon_smile_big.gif border=0 align=middle>"
Huge Entry & Massive Exit Wound.
Devastated 1 lung & took a bunch of fatty tissue with it on the exit.
"It's not the kill, it's the adventure and challenge! <img src=icon_smile_big.gif border=0 align=middle>"
#178
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 161
Likes: 0
From: Shenendoah IA USA
Posted before on a doe taken, took a 140 class 10 point with 100gr game tracker mechanicals, through the scapula, angling into the lung/heart. He went 125 yards and piled. No blad damage as on the doe. Did not get pass through but both went down in sight. I shot him at 6 yards from a ground blind and am disappointed on the penetration. It didn't pass through to the other shoulder. I find a lack of blood trail on well hit deer because of no pass through. Next year I'll probably go Shockwave or fixed.
THWACK!
THWACK!
#180
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 13
Likes: 0
From: Chelmsford MA USA
I'm a third year bow hunter who doesn't really count the first two because they were with borrowed or defective gear. This year I got my Magnatec working well two weeks into the season so I opted to use 100g proseries spitfires instead of the 100g thunderheads I bought last year. I was under the gun, didn't want to sacrifice practice time and the dealer said "sight in for the fieldtips and these will shoot in the same hole". Well he was right, I've shot two deer this year (first with a bow), a 100lb doe and a 143lb 5 point, Both from the same stand after 3.5 hours total for two outings! Here's my data
Hoyt Magnetec-Saber cam 28" draw
Beman ICS 400's cut to 25.75 inches
100 grain Proseries Spitfires
Tru-fire release
The doe was a slight quarter shot at 20 yds. Enter back lobe of right lung, liver and then paunch before exiting in front of the left rear leg. I didn't get a complete pass through, about 60% was hanging out. She didn't bleed for about 50 yards, then spots, stopped at 60 yards stood for a while and expired.
The buck was right below me in the treestand, about 20 feet. Got him to the left of the spine, slight angle through a major feed for the lungs and dead nuts through the heart, on to wedge in the breastplate. Solidly I might add. He ran about 3 yards, stumbled into a tree that another 6 yards and fell.
Both hits exhibited major internal damage, effective in the end for harvest. My only wonder is shouldn't I have got a complete pass through on a near broad side at 20 yards and overhead at 6 yards? Is the breastplate that stout? The doe had a belly full of browse from a night full of feeding before a nor-easter would either one of these slow an arrow down that much?
They do shoot exactly where you aim them though, I made zero adjustments when I went to the spitfires.
Hoyt Magnetec-Saber cam 28" draw
Beman ICS 400's cut to 25.75 inches
100 grain Proseries Spitfires
Tru-fire release
The doe was a slight quarter shot at 20 yds. Enter back lobe of right lung, liver and then paunch before exiting in front of the left rear leg. I didn't get a complete pass through, about 60% was hanging out. She didn't bleed for about 50 yards, then spots, stopped at 60 yards stood for a while and expired.
The buck was right below me in the treestand, about 20 feet. Got him to the left of the spine, slight angle through a major feed for the lungs and dead nuts through the heart, on to wedge in the breastplate. Solidly I might add. He ran about 3 yards, stumbled into a tree that another 6 yards and fell.
Both hits exhibited major internal damage, effective in the end for harvest. My only wonder is shouldn't I have got a complete pass through on a near broad side at 20 yards and overhead at 6 yards? Is the breastplate that stout? The doe had a belly full of browse from a night full of feeding before a nor-easter would either one of these slow an arrow down that much?
They do shoot exactly where you aim them though, I made zero adjustments when I went to the spitfires.



