Best test yet I’ve seen. Very interesting. Wish we could have a deer shoulder for every broadhead we ever want to test. Love the thoroughness of the video.
Those are well made heads. I shoot 2 blade heads both single and double bevel style with heavier arrows. I am a compound shooter. Blood trails are never predictable! There are just to many factors to consider when it comes to blood trails. I would shoot those heads without question and never look back. A bit wider cut may be nice, but the bigger the head the less penetration you will get all things being equal. very informative video!
Good video man cool to see an actual deer shoulder used. Would be nice to see what a double bevel like a magnus stinger would do to the humorous in comparison.
I might be able to do that at some point. Need a few more shoulders tho haha. I can tell you from my buddies experience tho…the ferrules bend and the tips curl.
Some three bladed broadheads out perform 2 blade broadheads for penetration and you have the extra blade!! Simmons broadheads I hear are great that drop blood on the ground
But neither out perform single bevel 2 blade. Single bevel 2 blades have mechanical advantage cutting causing them to not wedge into things but rather twirl through them. That’s been heavily tested and agreed upon by everyone.
@@ChavsADV I do hear some single bevel broadheads out perform other single bevel heads. You need a wide cut 1.5 inch also a 32 plus degree bevel angle to get that rotation. If the single bevel is not a wide cut the head will not leave much blood on the ground. Many bowhunters mentioned this. I would like to try the crimson Talon Croc single bevel, looks to be a winner
@@bradlauber9097I have VPA 3 blades in 1.125 125s on my wife’s arrows this year and I’m shooting VPA omega 200s. Hoping to compare the 2. I believe 3 blades will create better blood trail but 2 blades create better penetration. If you have 2 holes in theory you would get more blood also. I think that a well placed shot relies less on tracking than a poor shot.
I used a vpa 3 blade with my compound last year and had excellent results. Good blood trails, and no issues with penetration. Just get them sharp! I used 100 strokes in a stone on each side. Then went finer grit and repeated until they popped hair.
@@Leehealy-wheninthewoodsyeah I spent a lot of time getting them razor sharp. I actually have 6. 3 are for her, 3 for trad, and 3 omegas for my compound
Best test yet I’ve seen. Very interesting. Wish we could have a deer shoulder for every broadhead we ever want to test. Love the thoroughness of the video.
Thank you for watching! It is much appreciated!
Those are well made heads. I shoot 2 blade heads both single and double bevel style with heavier arrows. I am a compound shooter. Blood trails are never predictable! There are just to many factors to consider when it comes to blood trails. I would shoot those heads without question and never look back. A bit wider cut may be nice, but the bigger the head the less penetration you will get all things being equal. very informative video!
Good video man cool to see an actual deer shoulder used. Would be nice to see what a double bevel like a magnus stinger would do to the humorous in comparison.
I might be able to do that at some point. Need a few more shoulders tho haha. I can tell you from my buddies experience tho…the ferrules bend and the tips curl.
Look at razor broadheads or tuff head good video
Look rock solid
They are tough for sure! I’m happy to have them.
I agree with that a wider head would be nice. Maybe 1 3/16" with that new bleeder option would be sweet.
Yep! But the proof is in the results for me. They definitely work!
Did the broadhead go through the humerus to get into the vitals without deflection?
Yup! With a direct hit it did not deflect. With indirect hits on one blade the deflection was minimal.
Some three bladed broadheads out perform 2 blade broadheads for penetration and you have the extra blade!! Simmons broadheads I hear are great that drop blood on the ground
But neither out perform single bevel 2 blade. Single bevel 2 blades have mechanical advantage cutting causing them to not wedge into things but rather twirl through them. That’s been heavily tested and agreed upon by everyone.
@@ChavsADV I do hear some single bevel broadheads out perform other single bevel heads. You need a wide cut 1.5 inch also a 32 plus degree bevel angle to get that rotation. If the single bevel is not a wide cut the head will not leave much blood on the ground. Many bowhunters mentioned this. I would like to try the crimson Talon Croc single bevel, looks to be a winner
@@bradlauber9097I have VPA 3 blades in 1.125 125s on my wife’s arrows this year and I’m shooting VPA omega 200s. Hoping to compare the 2. I believe 3 blades will create better blood trail but 2 blades create better penetration. If you have 2 holes in theory you would get more blood also. I think that a well placed shot relies less on tracking than a poor shot.
I used a vpa 3 blade with my compound last year and had excellent results. Good blood trails, and no issues with penetration. Just get them sharp! I used 100 strokes in a stone on each side. Then went finer grit and repeated until they popped hair.
@@Leehealy-wheninthewoodsyeah I spent a lot of time getting them razor sharp. I actually have 6. 3 are for her, 3 for trad, and 3 omegas for my compound
Have to disagree, the shoulder blade does cause some heartbreak, but i would say the humorous bone is what stops most arrows