OK, somebody mentioned 20/64ths vs 22/64ths diamater possibly making a difference in penetration (all else equal I assume).
How can that small amount make for a difference, when:
The broadhead cuts a substantially larger hole ahead of the shaft.
The tissue is compromised and the shaft will be passing through in a fraction of a second (elasticity of the tissue substantially reduced by trauma).
On a 2 blade there may be some drag issue along the edge of the ferrule kinda perpendicular to the blades, and if using a large shaft with a stepped insert from BH to shaft then I could see some loading at that small transition but.........
there's lubricity in the wound fluids and the tissue again has been compromised.
I don't think shaft diamater to be an issue as far as friction is concerned (maybe not what was said- but I've heard/seen it mentioned elsewhere so am asking). There may be something to do with shaft flex at impact, maybe allowing for some sideloading of a BH during travel through the target medium.
But that is a flex issue, influenced by diameter but not fully governed by it.
Got into this discussion with a Six Sigma Blackbelt........and he said "well they pull out easier". Ugh.
The arrow has stopped travel, the tissue has closed/laid against the shaft.......yeah a smaller shaft might pull out easier (again there may be a flex issue when pulling it out or attempting to). But there I think BH blade angle at the back etc. to make for way more of an issue when backing one out, than shaft D.
I just never bought into the smaller is better deal, with shafts, based on the often touted friction argument.
But then I almost always blow through my deer