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After 3 day elk hunt this year, i set mym bow back up on the wall. About 3 or 4 days later i went to go to the range and i literally had light orange colored rust all over my blades. guess itd just me.
Quote from: Jonathan_S on February 05, 2014, 01:44:03 PMDoes anyone besides Smossy throw away blades after one hunt? I never have thought that the rust on my blades would be enough to damage the sharpness within a 2-3 day period.All my blades from this year are now practice blades but I thought that a one-and-done approach sounded a little overkill (expensive too) Depends on where you are hunting. Early on in my Savora days we tested stainless vs carbon on Catalina Island and the YO Ranch in Texas. The cross over point where stainless began performing as well as carbon was much more pronounced on Catalina than it was at the YO. While each day led to longer blood trails with both blade materials the environment of Catalina really accelerated the difference each new day brought to the results. On Catalina first day results with carbon on goats was recovery average of just over ten yards. On day five the average goat recovery was almost 80 yards. Day four carbon and stainless recoveries were the same.At the YO first day goat results were the same as Catalina. But day five results were still only 45 yards with carbon. And in that five day test at the YO stainless never did catch up to the average recovery distances of carbon. I expect if we had been closer to Houston the Catalina and Texas results would have been much closer due to similar humidity and salinity.
Does anyone besides Smossy throw away blades after one hunt? I never have thought that the rust on my blades would be enough to damage the sharpness within a 2-3 day period.All my blades from this year are now practice blades but I thought that a one-and-done approach sounded a little overkill (expensive too)
Rad, thanks for posting your Catalina/Texas results. That is quite interesting. It might help explain why I didn't seem to get a good blood trail when double lunging, and loosing, a cow elk on Long Island after a week and a half hunt, which I'm sure included splashing salt water on my bow/arrows. What about using something like RustGuard if a person wasn't worried about a few chemicals?
Rad, First off I do not doubt your knowledge at all, But am wondering about using recovery distances as a reasoning for broadhead steel degradation from rust. Blade sharpness, along with shot placement, animal size and health, terrain, etc., all have effects on recovery distance.(maybe I'm not understanding your testing )Not to downplay the importance of sharp blades, but for the average bowhunter this seems to be a trivial issue with microscopic rusting on blades. Personally, I have never treated my broadheads with any type of rust preventive, nor have I ever seen any type of rust on my Thunderheads,(lots of blood on em though) I just buy broadheads and proceed to shoot them thru animals(30 some deer, 12 elk, 3 bears) and have never had a problem with the broadhead being un-effective.
Anyhow as far as putting something on them how about Bore Butter? Protects a muzzle loader from rust, it's food grade, and got a nice minty smell the deer may even like
One of the many reasons for testing on goats is they are nearly all the same size. So that puts a pretty solid base line for comparison. Savora always followed the test parameters they used in Africa in the Chapinda Pools testing. X amount of animals this day shot in this part of the anatomy. X amount of animal shot the next day in the same area. Shots and data separated by shot location within the vitals. Say you have six goats killed day one with liver shots. The average distance traveled is X yards. Next day same number of animals taken with similar shots and the average distance traveled is XX yards. Next day XXX yards....and so on. How can the progressively longer distances animals travel be effected by anything more than blade sharpness when all the other variables remain the same? Same little island, same sized goats, same time of year, same equipment. Only difference being is each days test broadheads were assembled and set out exposed to the environment during the course of the testing period. Same thing can also be asked as to why in the first few days carbon steel always averaged fewer recovery yards than stainless.