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Main Boards => PowWow => Topic started by: Ratatat on August 22, 2016, 10:58:00 PM
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Found these in a box of arrows. Kinda neat. Not sure of the maker. One says "Hilbre". The small one at the top has a capital "H" on it. The corkscrew one is the most unusual.
(http://i499.photobucket.com/albums/rr357/miketatar/Mobile%20Uploads/20160822_224812.jpg) (http://s499.photobucket.com/user/miketatar/media/Mobile%20Uploads/20160822_224812.jpg.html)
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Yep! That is a cool find indeed!
Bisch
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I remember seeing that bottom one in the 70s .
It was supposed to make a figure 8 cut . But they had terrible penitration .
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That's a great find.
The top one looks a lot like a bodkin but the H would be out of place and it seems a bit short.
Second from the top looks kinda like an Ace.
My wife killed her first deer with a Hilbre. Some had the bleeder blades and some not. It worked very well but eventually CO made broadheads that Incorporated plastic illegal.
Never seen one like that fourth down.
My hunting partner in 1972 used the bottom one. I don't recall the maker, but as enthused as he was, I was skeptical. He never loosed one on game so we never found out of sure.
Lots of speculating on my part. To catch the eye of the resident experts you could edit your topic title to include a reference to broadheads.
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Browning Serpentine Broadhead
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Hills Hornet
MA3
Hilbre
???
Browning Serpentine
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Danny, I agree..... :thumbsup:
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Thats a great find.. awesome!!!
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Thanks guys. The top one has tiny holes in the furel.
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I remember having some serpentines in the mid 70s and some big ole vented Pearson heads. Brings back good memories but I cant see my silly self sharpening a serpentine
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Top one is a Hill Hornet and the forth one is a Herters Ram X
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Must be my eyes or the resolution on my phone but two from the top looks like a two blade.
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Top one is a HiPrecision (they sharpen up NICE but the tips are fragile). I have a couple dozen I use for small game.
I can't tell if that's a three or two edge? If two then I'm thinking a maybe a Lafond's (Does it have "Lightning" stamped on it?) If not, maybe an American Sabre 2 (what is the length?) or wipe it wih oil and take another image. I don't think it's an MA2 as the ferrule widens and narrows on them whereas yours is straitght taper. If three - I agree with MA3.
Then a Hilbre
Herters
Browning Serpenine
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Sorry - duplicated.
But here's a HiPrecision - note the "H" on the ferrule.
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v169/Stumpkiller/Broadheads/DSCN1210_zpsc940df1b.jpg)
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The second one is a three blade MA3 Bad angle on the third blade as it is facing almost directly at the camera
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Nice "find". To think some of the broad heads I have are considered a "find". I still have Pearson Deadheads attached to some of my hunting arrows.
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Yup, looked at on the desktop and can make it out now.
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I'm hunting with 1960 Mowoc Dots (Larry Whiffen Jr. found hundreds in storage a few years ago).
Deer haven't changed in 100,000 years, so good broadheads don't necessarily have to keep up. ;-)
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Ya can't just throw out a remark about a "Mowoc Dot" (whatever that is) without a picture :biglaugh:
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I thought EVERYONE knew about them. ;-)
(I borrow this image from BowHunterFromThePast).
(http://i698.photobucket.com/albums/vv341/bowhunterfrompast/Broadhead%20Collection/036.jpg)
My image makes it look too short.
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v169/Stumpkiller/HPIM2221.jpg)
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Nice looking head. Thanks for the pictures.
How do you think they compare with the Bodkins?
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Similar. The brazing process is much different and I think (guess) the hardness of the Mowoc is higher. (Based on how a Grobet fine single-cut file "bites" into the steel)