Free: Contests & Raffles.
Which broadheads were you using? Definitely did a number on that leg!
You're a ranch fairy D rider.
I DID just watch one of the new Stuck n the Rut videos where they shot a mechanical at a bull last year, hit him RIGHT in the bread basket and got maybe 10" of penetration. I feel pretty confident saying that if you're running mechanicals, especially on elk, I believe you should reconsider. Can it work? Sure. Do I trust it? Not at all. You can kill an elk with a .223, but it doesn't mean its the best choice. IMO mechanicals are the .223 of elk hunting.
Quote from: luvmystang67 on November 04, 2024, 12:45:44 PMI DID just watch one of the new Stuck n the Rut videos where they shot a mechanical at a bull last year, hit him RIGHT in the bread basket and got maybe 10" of penetration. I feel pretty confident saying that if you're running mechanicals, especially on elk, I believe you should reconsider. Can it work? Sure. Do I trust it? Not at all. You can kill an elk with a .223, but it doesn't mean its the best choice. IMO mechanicals are the .223 of elk hunting. And boom there it is. Debate open.... One could argue based on your story, where you state you were not confident in your equipment going into the season, and an elk recovery rate of 30 percent since using the new heads, that YOU should reconsider. The stuck in the rut video leaves ALOT open to interpretation..... we have no reference for his past success with the head? what head? How well his equipment was setup and tuned, his maximum range, or any other edits. We also have no idea if the head actually failed, broken blades, deployment failures etc only that it "deflected" it also hit where we assumed he aimed, left plenty of blood for them to follow and caused enough trauma to keg the bull up. The shot looks placed well, but it also looks like the bull may have been slightly quartered to as well, tough to see exact body position at moment of impact and again we are relying on complete transparency on their end. In the end maybe it was a failure or deficiency with the BH, or it may have been they were bailed out by a larger wound channel on a misread angle, deflection, or animal movment, without more info it's impossible to call. It wasn't super clean, but IMO it was a recovered animal without a difficult track and an animal unable to get up at the end of it. NO broadhead is perfect. All have strengths and weaknesses. An archers confidence should come, not from believing they have made a "perfect" choice in setup or equipment. But from understanding the limitations of what they are choosing to use and catering to the strengths, and doing everything possible to minimize the weaknesses.