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This picture is of a deer killed with a rifle. A Rage broadhead was found in the heart. It had encapsulated over. As Sproul stated, the Spitfire just looks better and has performed very well for me. Great and bad experiences with the Rage.
Moderator: Excalibur Marketing Dude
Let me know if you want to buy some more. I have some for sale on another forum.xbowrook wrote:I went to get lore Muzzy 3 blade fixed heads but they were out...so I went with the NAP Thunderhead 125 grain 3 blade fixed heads....
that's not a totally accurate statement in every case.. yes there are some who don't do their due diligence in ensuring the broadheads are tight, set properly, sharp etc.. i even saw a guy on youtube saying how the rage sucked meanwhile he had the blades backwards.. not sure how that happened but he did it.. but then there are situations where the blades don't perform.. the don't open upon impact or they open prematurely... i have only once had an issue with a fixed blade and that was actually with the boltcutters.. i also had issue with the mechanical wasp jackhammer's.. i had harvested many deer with them but i had it once where the blade never opened on impact and resulted in a lost deer... i am a 1 strike guy, if a blade fails once i am done with them. i hate wounding or losing deer, which is why i went back to fixed blades, far less to go wrong with them.. now i can't speak for every hunter, i know some just open the broadhead package after purchase, throw them on and head to the field.. but i know i go through many steps to make sure they are ready and that i have done all I can do so they perform to the level that they are marketed to do... sometimes hunters may use it as a crutch to divert from a bad shot etc... but there are many times where it IS a broadhead issue...L.C.B.H wrote:Blaming the broadhead is a crutch,and an excuse for a bad shot.I hear it everyday,all day from some who should not be in the woods.With any weapon,or any broadhead.
I'm amazed at this post. I normally use mechanicals. Since they are not static, the design is critical and not equal across all expandible designs. Rage broadheads seem to have great marketing and a greater measure of disappointment by their users. I've used Rage broadheads, never lost a deer to Rage broadheads but have never seen such varied results/performance with any other broadhead , fixed or expandible.L.C.B.H wrote:Blaming the broadhead is a crutch,and an excuse for a bad shot.I hear it everyday,all day from some who should not be in the woods.With any weapon,or any broadhead.
i agree.. now i have never used them to hunt and don't think i ever will.. i had purchased a set last year, much against my gut feeling... i put the target head on to sight in ( and i was getting dead nuts bullseye at 20 yards with my field points) and noticed the practice head was very rattly and the practice "blades" were very loose.. i put the heads on and didn't get a consistent group at all.. there was easily 6" spread on all shots.. it was scary... i took a bunch of shots and blew threw all the shock collars but had to try to get it accurate.. never did, best i got was like i say, 6" spread between 4 bolts at 20 yards.. they went straight into the garbage... lol... i took my 3 blade 125 grain muzzy fixed blades out ( i had them in my archery tool box) and 4 bolts hit dead on where my f/p was hitting... i actually ruined a bolt as the head sliced off my vane on another bolt that was stuck in the target... i read a bunch of reviews and a vast majority of them were people who ( like me) bought into the marketing and were greatly disappointed...SEW wrote:I'm amazed at this post. I normally use mechanicals. Since they are not static, the design is critical and not equal across all expandible designs. Rage broadheads seem to have great marketing and a greater measure of disappointment by their users. I've used Rage broadheads, never lost a deer to Rage broadheads but have never seen such varied results/performance with any other broadhead , fixed or expandible.L.C.B.H wrote:Blaming the broadhead is a crutch,and an excuse for a bad shot.I hear it everyday,all day from some who should not be in the woods.With any weapon,or any broadhead.
Arrowflinger wrote:xbowrook wrote:L.C.B.H wrote: i have only once had an issue with a fixed blade and that was actually with the boltcutters.. boltcutters Out of curiosity , what was the issue you had with Boltcutters? Thanks for your response.
yes, there are some people that shouldn't be in the woods, just like there are people who shouldn't be behind the wheel of a vehicle or be allowed to breed..... but you don't seem to get the point.. sometimes, the equipment fails, end of story.. just like anything in life ( vehicles, safety equipment, houses, etc.), it's not perfect, nothing ever is 100% perfect, there will always be mechanical issues with everything because everything is still man mad... . i have made , literally, perfect shots and had my equipment fail... i spend lots of time tuning and sighting in my equipment, everything is clean, tight and tuned in... sometimes, it is the equipment.. if what you say is true, then you would never hear of blades deploying early, or not at all... or limbs exploding when shooting or triggers locking up, etc... say what you think is true, but you are wrong as can be... i believe every hunter should do their best to make sure they equipment is as efficient as humanly possible.. but there are times when things go wrong that nobody can prepare for or expect to happen... bad shots is one thing.. but there are times, more than you obviously care to admit, where it's not the shot or the hunter.. crap happens ,to all of us , at one point or another...L.C.B.H wrote:People blaming a broadhead for bad shots is a very common excuse,it does not matter which head,fixed or mechanical.If your setup is not set up and dialed in.That's the hunter,not the equipment.Some people should not be in the woods,no matter what they have on tip of arrow.