Free: Contests & Raffles.
Well if you talk to opponents they would say that the bow harvest would jump incredibly and that we are losing the heritage of bowhunting. In reality there is no logical reason that they shouldn't be allowed.
They do not penetrate nearly as well as a fixed blade head (front or rear deploying) and by being mechanical that fact in an of itself makes them more prone to failure, although I will agree they have gotten very good. Also, they offer absolutely no advantage to a fixed blade broadhead from a even fairly well tuned bow.
Quote from: DBHAWTHORNE on March 31, 2011, 02:30:16 PMWell if you talk to opponents they would say that the bow harvest would jump incredibly and that we are losing the heritage of bowhunting. In reality there is no logical reason that they shouldn't be allowed.I understand this isn't your point of view but using that logic. If you were to hit a deer in the exact same spot with a Regular broadhead and a mechanical broad head and the deer hit with the mechanical dies where as the one hit with the regular broad head is just wounded. Wouldn't that make an argument that the mechanical is more ethical? Also I bet if you were to aim an arrow tipped with one or the other it's going to hit the target probably about the same amount of times therefore if one is more effective a killing as apposed to wounding then you would think it would be more ethical. then again like I said, I'm new to this and don't know what I'm talking about.
I believe the failure rate would probably be less than the numebr of guys that are shooting Fixedblade broadheads with poorly tuned bows (which I see all the time). I personally prefer fixed blade cut-on-contact broadheads and see no reason to change but I am certainly not against mechanicals.