Hey 5 SHOT
#1
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Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 302
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From: SCHENECTADY New York USA
A friend at the pro shop said " the best buy in the place ,for broad heads,had to be the Gold Tip Gladiator" .Good flight,good mix of fixed and mech.blades,and VERY sharp.Oh yea,$10.00 for 3 [
].Seems like a BARGAIN,,,is it,,a good head I mean ?.Have you tested it ?.Could you test it
].Seems like a BARGAIN,,,is it,,a good head I mean ?.Have you tested it ?.Could you test it
#2
5er did do a report on them not so long ago.
unfortunately I cant get the search to work.
From memory they did score well.
I have been using them on small game and some ferals and I will tell you they do leave a gaping hole.
IMO they are real good value for the money.
I have one that has been shot into the target 50 times and is still sharp it wont cut hair but with a couple of swipes with the diamond hone it will
unfortunately I cant get the search to work.
From memory they did score well.
I have been using them on small game and some ferals and I will tell you they do leave a gaping hole.
IMO they are real good value for the money.
I have one that has been shot into the target 50 times and is still sharp it wont cut hair but with a couple of swipes with the diamond hone it will
#3
Nontypical Buck
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 2,978
Likes: 0
From: Vinton VA
Gold Tip Gladiator 100 grain
Accuracy: 3 points
Plywood 3 points
Steel drum 2 points
Orange 5 points
Blades 4 points
Cutting diameter 4 points
Non-mechanical blades 2 points
Total score 23 with a blade sharpness rating of A
The Gold tip Gladiator is sort of a hybrid head. It has two fixed blades and two mechanical blades. It also has a “trocar” style tip and a composite ferule. The mechanical blades are held in place by friction, much like the New Archery products Spitfires. I found that they are slower to open compared to heads that use O rings or rubber bands. I don’t consider it a problem with the Gladiator though, as the head does have the two fixed blades.
The Accuracy is good, but it does fly more like a fixed blade head than a field point. They did not group with my field points, but shot consistently. I am sure with some tinkering you could probably get them to group with field points, provided you have a enough fletching to steer them. In the orange test they got a 5, simply because of the two fixed blades. In the plywood it penetrated most of the way through, but not completely. The two mechanical blades did not fully open, stopping the head short of full penetration. In the steel drum the head fully opened and penetrated one side, bouncing off the far wall.
Overall I like the Gladiator, it is strong, sharp, accurate, and should make one big hole in any animal you hit! The mechanical blades are slow to open, and I believe that to use this head effectively you should be pushing 60 ft/lbs of energy or more.
I was not really sure how to test this head, is it a mechanical with two fixed blades or a fixed blade head with two mechanical blades? Do I shoot it into the Orange or the tire? I decided to test it as a mechanical head, but to give it 2 points for it’s non-mechanical blades. The first time I listed the scores I did not give the Gladiator credit for the two fixed blades, but I really feel it deserves the extra 2 points. This is one of those heads that really mess with my scoring system! That said I think if you want more cutting diameter than most fixed blade heads, but are unsure of mechanicals, this may be the head for you.
Accuracy: 3 points
Plywood 3 points
Steel drum 2 points
Orange 5 points
Blades 4 points
Cutting diameter 4 points
Non-mechanical blades 2 points
Total score 23 with a blade sharpness rating of A
The Gold tip Gladiator is sort of a hybrid head. It has two fixed blades and two mechanical blades. It also has a “trocar” style tip and a composite ferule. The mechanical blades are held in place by friction, much like the New Archery products Spitfires. I found that they are slower to open compared to heads that use O rings or rubber bands. I don’t consider it a problem with the Gladiator though, as the head does have the two fixed blades.
The Accuracy is good, but it does fly more like a fixed blade head than a field point. They did not group with my field points, but shot consistently. I am sure with some tinkering you could probably get them to group with field points, provided you have a enough fletching to steer them. In the orange test they got a 5, simply because of the two fixed blades. In the plywood it penetrated most of the way through, but not completely. The two mechanical blades did not fully open, stopping the head short of full penetration. In the steel drum the head fully opened and penetrated one side, bouncing off the far wall.
Overall I like the Gladiator, it is strong, sharp, accurate, and should make one big hole in any animal you hit! The mechanical blades are slow to open, and I believe that to use this head effectively you should be pushing 60 ft/lbs of energy or more.
I was not really sure how to test this head, is it a mechanical with two fixed blades or a fixed blade head with two mechanical blades? Do I shoot it into the Orange or the tire? I decided to test it as a mechanical head, but to give it 2 points for it’s non-mechanical blades. The first time I listed the scores I did not give the Gladiator credit for the two fixed blades, but I really feel it deserves the extra 2 points. This is one of those heads that really mess with my scoring system! That said I think if you want more cutting diameter than most fixed blade heads, but are unsure of mechanicals, this may be the head for you.
#4
Thread Starter
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 302
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From: SCHENECTADY New York USA
Thanks 5 SHOT.Very quick reply
With my ever so short arms,and my 8" BH,getting 60+ ft.pds. of KE takes some doing.Like drawing 75 lbs.I' m shooting around 72 now,with Bemans that weigh in @386 finished.Going to shop this weekend to shoot through the chrono. to see what it' s doing.I' ll tell you,STILL not much of a bark out of that bow.
LOVE that navacom rubber

With my ever so short arms,and my 8" BH,getting 60+ ft.pds. of KE takes some doing.Like drawing 75 lbs.I' m shooting around 72 now,with Bemans that weigh in @386 finished.Going to shop this weekend to shoot through the chrono. to see what it' s doing.I' ll tell you,STILL not much of a bark out of that bow.
LOVE that navacom rubber

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