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09-15-2021, 07:11 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: edmonton
Posts: 345
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No penetration broadhead
Hi everyone, so was out hunting elk ( looking for my first elk) after years and years. Last day of my hunt got on the elk, bulls bugling, snuck in then got close to start a chess make with a bull. Short story, the bull committed, came in perfect up wind at 18-20 yards, let my arrow fly with a slick trick raptor, heard a loud crack and was super exited as the bull ran 40 yards and stopped expecting the bull to fall over. Little speckles of blood and that’s it and a broken arrow back with no penetration, as the arrow hit a rib and deflected and broke. Anyone have this happen to them, I was completely sick and about to cry as I thought I had my first elk, and it was a beautiful 5x5or6x6. If you did what kind of broadhead. I’m so discouraged that my equipment let me down.
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09-15-2021, 07:35 PM
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Join Date: Oct 2018
Posts: 7,493
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Sounds like you hit heavy bone
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09-15-2021, 08:05 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Look behind you :)
Posts: 27,780
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Sounds like a shoulder blade? How much of the arrow broke off? In the heart/ lung region an elk chest is only 9-12” deep… I have had a moving leg snap my arrow off a well hit elk… he only went 80-100 yrds and died with little blood because of the shot placement. The arrow and broadhead did the job though.
LC
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09-15-2021, 10:53 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: East Kootenays, BC
Posts: 1,169
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I really doubt you hit a rib. Ribs don't usually affect arrows much. Even shoulder blades are fairly thin and are penetrated easily if hit square on, but will deflect arrows that strike at an angle. Sounds more like a hit to the humerus.
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09-15-2021, 11:29 PM
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Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 1,521
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Shoulder
Loud smack is shoulder, was prob angling to more than you thought. He will be fine. Wait for a perfect broadside and go 2 a 2 blade if u r scared of penetration issues.
Alien archery makes great cheap ones, 12 for 100$
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09-15-2021, 11:54 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: edmonton
Posts: 345
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Thanks, everyone
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09-16-2021, 12:01 AM
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Oz
Posts: 2,124
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Yes I’ve been there and yes there are solutions. I’m not going to start guessing as to what happened, if you want my help you can tell us what you know and we can fix it from there. If you don’t ever want that to happen again, there are things you can change to make sure your gear won’t let you down in the future regardless of what anyone else says. Arrows and broadheads can be built to take any impact without failure but most won’t test hard enough to find the answers. That’s a bold claim and I’ll make it because I’ve already learned this the hard way and my experience isn’t a slave to anyone’s opinion.
Any pics of the arrow? Preferably next to another full length arrow. Where was the blood on the animal/ where do you think you hit him, what angle was he at relative to you and what’s your current arrow/broadhead combination? What are your bow specs? How well is it tuned and how do you know if it’s tuned or not? Did you tune it or did a shop?
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09-16-2021, 07:10 AM
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: At the end of the Thirsty Beaver Trail, Pinsky lake, Alberta.
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You hit heavy bone....shot placement not broadhead issue....it will happen.
I have a rule and that is To immediately knock another arrow....happened to me on a moose...whack....he jolted 10 yards and stopped...the other arrow was a complete pass through
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09-16-2021, 09:13 AM
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Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Look behind you :)
Posts: 27,780
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For comparison this is the arrow I used to kill an elk this last week, the back part fell out after he took 2 steps… cleaved off by the leg.
The front part stayed inside. Arrow went through the back muscle of the leg, into the rib cage and smashed a rib square in the offside. Going through both lungs.
The bull didn't bleed much because of the shot placement but does very fast.
LC
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09-16-2021, 11:34 AM
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Banned
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Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 5,701
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I had the same thing with a bull moose
Called him in to 20 yards, let er fly and drilled it. So I thought
Watched him walk across a entire quarter section. Chase some deer out of that field. I was scratching my head. Why didn’t he fall over? I Smoked him right in the shoulder. Found the arrow after an mile or tracking him. Followed him for 5 hours. When I started tracking him again the next day. He was back in front of my tree stand 🤦*♂️ When he ram away he didn’t even have a limp lol
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09-16-2021, 03:40 PM
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Join Date: May 2007
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Quote:
Originally Posted by brewster29
I really doubt you hit a rib. Ribs don't usually affect arrows much. Even shoulder blades are fairly thin and are penetrated easily if hit square on, but will deflect arrows that strike at an angle. Sounds more like a hit to the humerus.
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I think you are right its the heaviest bone in the body. Can easily turn an arrow.
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09-16-2021, 04:34 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Fort McMurray, AB
Posts: 2,515
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Lots of experience on here and over on archerytalk.
While I don’t have the experience I’ve had that fear of under penetration.
I upgraded from a 100 grain Exodus to a 150 grain VPA cut on contact broadhead. I’ll be getting some insert / outserts for my arrows as well. Looking to beef up the business end of the arrow to help with penetration. I won’t be shooting past 30 yards so my moose and elk hunting won’t need super speed and flat trajectory. Just going a bit heavy and a bit slower.
But the sound you describe sounds like leg bone…
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09-17-2021, 10:28 AM
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 6,697
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This is the problem that trad hunters have battled forever. Light and fast doesn’t penetrate like heavy and a bit slower.
I like to build my arrows with footing front and back, and for big animals I like
Single bevel cut on contact blades with FOC “high enough.”
A really well designed heavy arrow out of a heavy bow “will” penetrate the heavy bones but for Canadian animals it’s just better to avoid those bones 🤨
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09-17-2021, 04:16 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2020
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Had a similar thing happen last October 31st. A beautiful whitetail snuck past me just at the point I was loosing light in a hemlock swamp. It was walking straight away when I drew back. at around 15 yards it turned to what I thought was a great angle to double lung him. I let fly and watched the deer nose into the earth on the first leap with my luminock it it as it went up the hill. I never retrieved the deer despite leaving it overnight and then tracking it over 700 yards until I simply lost the track. I did find my arrow about 60 yards over the hill that night and only had about 5" of penetration. I shoot a 60# bow and was using Rage hypodermic 2 blade retractable. Replaying it over and over in my mind, it was just dark enough in that swamp that when I thought it was broadside, I think it was actually quartering away and my shot placement was off and I think it hit his shoulder. Made me sick and I loss sleep over that deer. On the other side of the coin though, our gang hunted that bush hard for the next week during the rifle season and never came across the deer or any sign that coyotes had found it. Whitetails can have a strong demeanor and can survive at times what we think could have been a mortal hit.
~ Michael.
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09-17-2021, 04:54 PM
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Oz
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If nobody wants to discuss this I’ll leave it alone but why do you guys above accept that as “normal” for archery tackle?
Guys shoot through this with an arrow
And this
And elephants, hippos and rhinos.
Before you get to those ribs you’ve got to get through the hide on these animals. Ever seen the leather on a water buff?
But those above accept that we occasionally can’t penetrate this
Or even more pathetically, can’t penetrate a deer.
And it’s accepted as fact. “Oh, you made a bad shot. Better luck next time”.
The internet is full of information, it’s also full of urban legend and misinformation. I’ll admit I did plenty of reading “online” after I had failures but then I did the testing. Lots of testing and I’ll be the first to tell you that your not only wrong to accept what you have but you’ve got your heads in the sand if you don’t want to critically evaluate your gear and change some things to make it perform better then it is. Your accepting poor performance because your not willing to look for an alternative and the “internet” told you that’s just how it is.
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09-17-2021, 06:57 PM
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Join Date: May 2011
Location: whitecourt
Posts: 1,293
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A poorly tuned bow with poor arrow flight will cause poor penetration as well.if the axis of the arrow is not in line with the target it won't go in very far. Just saying...
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09-17-2021, 06:59 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: St Albert
Posts: 848
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Coiloil37
If nobody wants to discuss this I’ll leave it alone but why do you guys above accept that as “normal” for archery tackle?
Guys shoot through this with an arrow
And this
And elephants, hippos and rhinos.
Before you get to those ribs you’ve got to get through the hide on these animals. Ever seen the leather on a water buff?
But those above accept that we occasionally can’t penetrate this
Or even more pathetically, can’t penetrate a deer.
And it’s accepted as fact. “Oh, you made a bad shot. Better luck next time”.
The internet is full of information, it’s also full of urban legend and misinformation. I’ll admit I did plenty of reading “online” after I had failures but then I did the testing. Lots of testing and I’ll be the first to tell you that your not only wrong to accept what you have but you’ve got your heads in the sand if you don’t want to critically evaluate your gear and change some things to make it perform better then it is. Your accepting poor performance because your not willing to look for an alternative and the “internet” told you that’s just how it is.
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100% couldn't agree more. Stick bow archers understand heavy, slow cut on contact single bevel tackle all too well. Unfortunately speed is addictive and makes getting every extra foot of range that much easier. And the majority of the time it works, until it doesn't.
I draw blood and I and my hunt is over, regardless of animal being flesh wounded or dead. Always have and ways will. I haven't wounded and animal in a long time but the first time I did I was a boy. I made a poor shot with the rifle on a deer and we
ever did find it. My dad took my tag and tossed it in the campfire. Not out of anger, but out of necessity. I spent the rest of that season watching my youger brother get to hunt when I couldn't. I really noticed how careful and selective he was. That hunting season changed me as a person. There shouldn't be any 'miques, or gimmies' when your attempting to kill another living creature. Now I'm not saying not to go after a wounded animal, you 100% are obligated to. But if that animal sheds it's blood and you never find it. It won, you lost. Go practice for the rest of the season, try again next year. Having this mentally will force one to re-evaluate ones whole hunting prowess.
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09-17-2021, 09:30 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Look behind you :)
Posts: 27,780
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Quote:
Originally Posted by normanrd
A poorly tuned bow with poor arrow flight will cause poor penetration as well.if the axis of the arrow is not in line with the target it won't go in very far. Just saying...
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Amen to that… if people spent time tuning for proper arrow flight and placement, they would spend less time looking for animals.
LC
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09-19-2021, 11:12 AM
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Join Date: Aug 2011
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You hit the shoulder or humerus. Maybe more of an angle than you thought, maybe he jumped the string just enough, maybe you were off in your POA or POI. There’s 12 inches of lethal rib/lung area behind the shoulder of an elk. Aim for the center of that, not the crease.
And stop using expandables for elk. If you can’t get a original or magnum slick trick to fly well there’s something wrong with your setup.
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09-20-2021, 06:28 AM
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Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Calgary
Posts: 1,522
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Must be using those Berger broad heads. Some of you guys make it sound like the game is made out of armoured steel! you can punch through a shoulder cut ribs in half and break legs with arrows fairly easily and still get the kill.
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09-20-2021, 06:41 AM
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: At the end of the Thirsty Beaver Trail, Pinsky lake, Alberta.
Posts: 24,610
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Let’s just say there are many variables that come into play and we need to minimize what can go wrong to ensure a clean kill.
Every person that hunts world wide has had to resort to tracking, lost game etc or eventually will but we do are absolute best not to.
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Be careful when you follow the masses, sometimes the "M" is silent...
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09-20-2021, 06:45 AM
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: At the end of the Thirsty Beaver Trail, Pinsky lake, Alberta.
Posts: 24,610
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 58thecat
You hit heavy bone....shot placement not broadhead issue....it will happen.
I have a rule and that is To immediately knock another arrow....happened to me on a moose...whack....he jolted 10 yards and stopped...the other arrow was a complete pass through
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Ohhh and this was cut on Impact broadhead razor sharp, Easton 2219 arrows, 65lbs draw weight but looking back a slight angle and front leg angle to me wasn’t favourable ohhhh yeah hindsight...
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Be careful when you follow the masses, sometimes the "M" is silent...
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09-20-2021, 09:27 AM
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 6,697
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Two, good posts.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ramonmark
100% couldn't agree more. Stick bow archers understand heavy, slow cut on contact single bevel tackle all too well. Unfortunately speed is addictive and makes getting every extra foot of range that much easier. And the majority of the time it works, until it doesn't.
I draw blood and I and my hunt is over, regardless of animal being flesh wounded or dead. Always have and ways will. I haven't wounded and animal in a long time but the first time I did I was a boy. I made a poor shot with the rifle on a deer and we
ever did find it. My dad took my tag and tossed it in the campfire. Not out of anger, but out of necessity. I spent the rest of that season watching my youger brother get to hunt when I couldn't. I really noticed how careful and selective he was. That hunting season changed me as a person. There shouldn't be any 'miques, or gimmies' when your attempting to kill another living creature. Now I'm not saying not to go after a wounded animal, you 100% are obligated to. But if that animal sheds it's blood and you never find it. It won, you lost. Go practice for the rest of the season, try again next year. Having this mentally will force one to re-evaluate ones whole hunting prowess.
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09-20-2021, 06:53 PM
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Coronation
Posts: 2,529
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A lot of bowhunters are cross-overs from the world of rifle. Many have been told that shoulder and neck shots are deadly. The problem is that those shot placement choices require a lot of energy to be successful. That is exactly what is missing. Archers need to aim for the furnace room, shoulder and neck shots are ineffective.
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09-21-2021, 08:07 AM
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Join Date: Apr 2013
Location: Calgary
Posts: 64
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Quote:
Originally Posted by russ
A lot of bowhunters are cross-overs from the world of rifle. Many have been told that shoulder and neck shots are deadly. The problem is that those shot placement choices require a lot of energy to be successful. That is exactly what is missing. Archers need to aim for the furnace room, shoulder and neck shots are ineffective.
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I'll add to this. The one and only elk I've gotten with my bow was with a quartering-away shot at 20 yards. I aimed for a spot in the boiler room, behind the shoulder, with the exit point at the front leg on the other side. It would have been a perfect rifle shot.
With the bow, though, at that angle the ribcage formed a solid wall that the arrow couldn't penetrate, and it got deflected up and behind the shoulder. Poor thing ran for 800 m before bleeding out and dying, finally found it the next morning after it sat out all night in temperatures of +8 C. The meat didn't smell so great at that point, but I kept it and ate it anyway out of respect and perhaps, penance.
Lesson learned. A bow is not a rifle, and I will never take a quartering-away shot with it again. For this limited-skills archer, it's full broadside or nothing now.
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09-21-2021, 07:31 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Look behind you :)
Posts: 27,780
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 1894Cowboy
I'll add to this. The one and only elk I've gotten with my bow was with a quartering-away shot at 20 yards. I aimed for a spot in the boiler room, behind the shoulder, with the exit point at the front leg on the other side. It would have been a perfect rifle shot.
With the bow, though, at that angle the ribcage formed a solid wall that the arrow couldn't penetrate, and it got deflected up and behind the shoulder. Poor thing ran for 800 m before bleeding out and dying, finally found it the next morning after it sat out all night in temperatures of +8 C. The meat didn't smell so great at that point, but I kept it and ate it anyway out of respect and perhaps, penance.
Lesson learned. A bow is not a rifle, and I will never take a quartering-away shot with it again. For this limited-skills archer, it's full broadside or nothing now.
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Must have been extremely bad luck, I have shot a couple elk with a quartering away shot and had great results, was even using a dreaded mechanical broadhead.
Clean
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09-21-2021, 08:37 PM
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Join Date: May 2011
Location: Camrose, Ab
Posts: 842
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Slight quartering away is one of my favourite shots. There is no way a quartering away elks rib cage made a brick wall an arrow couldn’t go through. Once again poor shot placement. There are thousands of tests done on broadheads where they’re shot at a sheet of plywood at an extreme angle and it just deflects the arrow. We all mess up shot placement but people sure resort to other excuses pretty quick.
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09-22-2021, 08:44 AM
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Join Date: May 2007
Location: St. Albert, AB
Posts: 1,178
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In the excitement of moment whose to say didnt hit a branch first and deflect and just crease the elk. What you think you see isnt always what actually happens out there especially in the excitement of moment, Agree with poorly tuned bow can affect penetration.
Gord
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09-22-2021, 08:06 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Sunset House
Posts: 1,256
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Coiloil37
If nobody wants to discuss this I’ll leave it alone but why do you guys above accept that as “normal” for archery tackle?
Guys shoot through this with an arrow
And this
And elephants, hippos and rhinos.
Before you get to those ribs you’ve got to get through the hide on these animals. Ever seen the leather on a water buff?
But those above accept that we occasionally can’t penetrate this
Or even more pathetically, can’t penetrate a deer.
And it’s accepted as fact. “Oh, you made a bad shot. Better luck next time”.
The internet is full of information, it’s also full of urban legend and misinformation. I’ll admit I did plenty of reading “online” after I had failures but then I did the testing. Lots of testing and I’ll be the first to tell you that your not only wrong to accept what you have but you’ve got your heads in the sand if you don’t want to critically evaluate your gear and change some things to make it perform better then it is. Your accepting poor performance because your not willing to look for an alternative and the “internet” told you that’s just how it is.
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Out of curiosity what kind of gear do you use on Buffalo?
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09-23-2021, 04:24 AM
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Oz
Posts: 2,124
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cody j
Out of curiosity what kind of gear do you use on Buffalo?
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With the exception of total weight the exact same setup everyone should be using and most of these problems discussed above would go away.
A perfectly tuned bow shooting a perfectly tuned arrow. That’s priority #1. A properly tuned bow will shoot a fletched field tip, bare shaft and ANY straight spinning broadhead to the same poi at your max range. I’ve shot three arrows as described at 70m and had all three shafts touching. Tuning is the bedrock of penetration.
Then the arrow has to maintain structural integrity on any hit. If the insert slips, shaft breaks, broadhead bends the penetration is over. I torture test every type of arrow I want to hunt to ensure it will never break on any impact. And they survive but the entire system has to be tested until failure and that failure fixed until it’s integrity is 100%. Do me a favour, take your bow out, find a piece of stone or brick big enough it won’t move and won’t break and shoot it at 10m. If your arrow breaks you need to adjust your setup. If it doesn’t, move in until your shooting it at 3-4m straight on and at an angle and if it’s not breaking you’ve got that covered. Don’t bother with a cinder block, they’re to soft. If the target breaks find something harder to shoot. If your sitting there thinking “no way I’m wasting an arrow like that” you have some work to do because they can be built to take that abuse.
Then for heavy game, arrow mass plays a large part. Heavier arrows penetrate deeper. After that there are smaller changes that make a difference. Type of broadhead, FOC, bevel(s), broadhead tip type, mechanical advantage etc.
There is a ton of information on the web from hunters and guides using archery tackle on heavy game.
I still haven’t killed a buff. I had a trip to the gulf back in 2014 that went pear shaped. One of the guys in the group brought his five pig dogs. They all ate 1080 at a gas station just shy of the property and had to be shot. Matt was pretty torn up about losing his dogs and upset the land owner. The deal went from “come shoot everything you want for free” to “if you want a buff your paying $50k and pigs are $500 a piece.
I have another trip planned next October up in the same area of the Northern Territory. There are seven of us going for two weeks. Sleeping on a houseboat, we are taking three fishing boats, my bows and a few rifles. We have open slather again on a half million acres and I’ll attempt to get a couple buffalo with the bow. My setup last time was a footed .250 spine fmj dangerous game and a 250 grain vpa. This time I may go with a .200 kinetic and 250 grain vpa but that’s yet to be tested. If not I’ll take the fmj’s again.
While I haven’t shot a buff yet I killed over two doz elk in Alberta and a couple moose along with deer, bears and antelope. I had penetration issues at one point and decided that wasn’t good enough. I researched and tested until I could break any bone in an elks body. Prior to that I’ve seen broadheads skip on ribs, poor penetration and shoulders stop arrows as well as broken arrows and bent or broken broadheads. In the last fifteen years I haven’t had an arrow stop in an animal and haven’t so much as bent a broadhead. I’ve broken the humerus, shoulders, pelvics, spines, ribs. Shot lengthways through them and can tell you it’s possible to be amazed how deeply an arrow can penetrate if it’s setup and tuned properly. Most of my post mortem testing was on bears and I shot through them lengthways breaking legs on both ends.
I’ll share whatever I’ve learned but you’ve got to ask whatever your wondering about cause I can’t read minds.
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