Home
I picked up some gear to evaluate sharp in my shop. My bowhunting company needed to better quantify what "sharp" means for my customers. Now I can quantify what sharp looks like and cuts like as it applies to broadheads. While there are only a very very small number of bowhunters here, I expect some might find it worth while and might be able to understand the concepts I present here. I expect that of the super small number of actual bowhunters here, that many just buy whatever Walmart has on sale and dont give sharpness a second thought but I hope to expand your horizons. The rest will simply whine and complain act like fools (You have been patterned.) wink

Originally Posted by sharp_things
I expect that of the super small number of actual bowhunters here, that many just buy whatever Walmart has on sale and dont give sharpness a second thought but I hope to expand your horizons.



Wrong.
Blade angle, tip type, number of blades, bevel type, degree of sharpness..........and that just the head.
Then theres FOC, overall weight, quality of flight.

I did buy a sharpener w a strop from my local big chain sportings goods store and it quickly made my Cutthroat broadheads shaving sharp.

Have met some trad guys that run BH's a bit on the dull side IMHO.
Yrs ago got some Magnus 2 blades shaving sharp w just a file.
Zwickeys I never could LOL

Lost the knack or steel change, hell I dunno, last Magnus I couldn't get em to pop.
Thought I was similarly afflicted this past yr, until I got a strop.

Scary sharp now, and took very little time. Do think the Cutthroats harder mofos (steel) compared to other brands I've had.
Interesting tests, not withstanding the condescending comments about some bow hunters.
scientific is that. but a blade hit by a file to get a general angle and then on paper wheels, without all the time and effort of all this other stuff has never failed for us.

As to some things like checking heads during season etc... it goes to be said for years good bowhunters know to check and touch up as needed ever since I was a kid. And we've known not to trust factory heads at all.

Good selling video though if you can convince the folks they need all this your pocket book gets fatter.

Same tools have been on the market for years differing versions and we tried them. Yep they do work. At a cost of time. A good file and paper wheels are so much more efficient.

Caveat you do have to be able to know what you are doing with them.
Thanks for the link. I thought I was the only one who obsessed over sharpness.
© 24hourcampfire