When it comes to broadheads I'm as fickle as a farm boy at a barn dance, I gotta dance with em all.
There's been times that I've had two or three different heads in my quiver at a time when hunting. I really like BIG two blade heads, they sharpen easy and cut a hole like a small ax. In the 50's I used the big 2 blade Goshawk, then the Pierson DeadHead and as of late the Ace Super Express.
I've killed a lot of deer with the old Bear Razorhead which made an + going in and a - coming out because the bleeder would collapse when if went past the rib bones, but of coarse that's what it was designed to do.
Sometime around 1960 I used the 3 blade M-A 3 and Bodkin heads and killed some deer with them. I always got good penetration and good blood trails with those heads. If you're familiar with the M-A 3 and Bodkin heads you know that the steel was not the best to get a good edge so I would serrate them with a file.
Are 3 blades good heads? are 4 blades good? are 2 blades good?... :confused: . Yes on all of them. Sharp heads and good shot placement is still the key for any broadhead. As to which is best??...
I'm a dancin man so
When the leaves turn gold an there's a hunters moon, an fall is in the air.
I'm gonna dance to the hunters tune..which broadhead? I don't much care. Here's one I shot with an M-A 3 back in 1961