what would say was the biggest
#21
Slick Tricks are as tough as an Anvil, Sharp as a scapel, excellent flight characteristics, No moving parts, and cut huge holes that leave amazing Blood Trails.
I really don't know what's notto like about them.
Dan
I really don't know what's notto like about them.

Dan
#24
ORIGINAL: MeanV2
Slick Tricks are as tough as an Anvil, Sharp as a scapel, excellent flight characteristics, No moving parts, and cut huge holes that leave amazing Blood Trails.
I really don't know what's notto like about them.
Dan
Slick Tricks are as tough as an Anvil, Sharp as a scapel, excellent flight characteristics, No moving parts, and cut huge holes that leave amazing Blood Trails.
I really don't know what's notto like about them.

Dan
And I believe their slogan is "Daddy was an Anvil, Momma was a Scapel."
But anyway,arent they made with the same design?
#25
Biggest advantage would be the axe like wounds they leave. It's easy to follow a blood trail when it looks like it was poured from a bucket 6 feet high.
#27
ORIGINAL: bigbulls
The biggest advantage to the slick tricks is that they are the only broadhead I have seen or used that combines all the atributes thatI desire from a broadhead into a single head. No otherbroadehad has everything rolled into a single broadheadlike the slick trick.
No moving parts to fail, 100% steel for unsurpassed strength and durability, surgically sharp baldes,.035" thick blades that won't fail evenstriking massive ammounts of bone,4 blades to cut huge ammounts of tissue,and excelent flight.
The biggest advantage to the slick tricks is that they are the only broadhead I have seen or used that combines all the atributes thatI desire from a broadhead into a single head. No otherbroadehad has everything rolled into a single broadheadlike the slick trick.
No moving parts to fail, 100% steel for unsurpassed strength and durability, surgically sharp baldes,.035" thick blades that won't fail evenstriking massive ammounts of bone,4 blades to cut huge ammounts of tissue,and excelent flight.
#28
Typical Buck
Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 754
Likes: 0
From: McDonough, GA
ORIGINAL: YooperMike
Ditto.
ORIGINAL: bigbulls
The biggest advantage to the slick tricks is that they are the only broadhead I have seen or used that combines all the atributes thatI desire from a broadhead into a single head. No otherbroadehad has everything rolled into a single broadheadlike the slick trick.
No moving parts to fail, 100% steel for unsurpassed strength and durability, surgically sharp baldes,.035" thick blades that won't fail evenstriking massive ammounts of bone,4 blades to cut huge ammounts of tissue,and excelent flight.
The biggest advantage to the slick tricks is that they are the only broadhead I have seen or used that combines all the atributes thatI desire from a broadhead into a single head. No otherbroadehad has everything rolled into a single broadheadlike the slick trick.
No moving parts to fail, 100% steel for unsurpassed strength and durability, surgically sharp baldes,.035" thick blades that won't fail evenstriking massive ammounts of bone,4 blades to cut huge ammounts of tissue,and excelent flight.
#29
Every broadhead I shoot is chosen to provide me the biggest cutting diameter each set up can provide on the majority of shots I will encounter on a live animal and STILL pass thru the majority of the time.
I couldnt care less about hitting large bone like the shoulder blade. Experience has shown me that the vast majority of hits will be soft tissue body cavity hits, and the bad ones will 9 times out of 10 be a little bit to far back.
I would never shoot a 1 1/8" fixed head that I think might break a shoulder blade when I never hit there.
However I feel better knowing that I have an overkill sized cutting diameter if the deer takes a step as I release. 
I couldnt care less about hitting large bone like the shoulder blade. Experience has shown me that the vast majority of hits will be soft tissue body cavity hits, and the bad ones will 9 times out of 10 be a little bit to far back.
I would never shoot a 1 1/8" fixed head that I think might break a shoulder blade when I never hit there.
However I feel better knowing that I have an overkill sized cutting diameter if the deer takes a step as I release. 




