CuttnThenStackn
New member
I help track deer for people all the time. One of my buddies has a blood dog and we track deer for people all hunting season, and guess which broadheads are the result of many of these track jobs and the ones that keeps my buddy in the tracking business? Mechanical broadheads! Common sense should tell people that a fixed blade broadhead will have the cutting diameter they are supposed to have no matter how bad the shot is made. Yes, you have to hit the deer, that is common sense also. But with a fixed blade broadhead, you never have to worry if whether or not your blades are deployed. I dont care how a broadhead performs on a perfectly placed shot, I want a broadhead that will still stand a good chance of killing a deer if a bad shot is made.