These are all you hear about anymore and would think that they figured out a new way to slice bread!
No hard feelings at all but there is way too much hype about all of this in our community IMO.
I am a younger guy, almost 33, and a gear snob, but I can't get excited about this.. I do shoot skinny carbons (and woodies depending on the bow)with short 4 fletch feathers these days, but really dont see the advantage out to 25-30 yards whether your feathers be soaked or not. if you have a properly tuned arrow it makes not difference.Do you bareshaft? Ok then what's the problem? I personally just dont want to shoot vanes out of a trad bow... To each there own though!
Problem with that is the information out there is the opposite of what you stated. Check out tradlab he tested every feather/broadhead combo against tradvane/broadhead combo out of shooting machines. It does matter, soaking wet feathers creates a hinge affect on the back of the shaft because of weight. That intern makes the shaft VERY stiff. Hence making arrow flight very erratic with a broadhead out front. And that causes loss a of energy. Which can cause pour penetration on an animal.
Wasn't trying to cause and argument bud, just trying to point out my personal experience and most of ours that have been hunting trad for an extended period of time... You CAN make a true lethal shot with wet feathers and a well tuned arrow... I get what the Tradlab said... I listen to it too.. But I have killed plenty of pigs with a sopping wet 2016 with (3) 5" feathers and a snuffer on the front that stuck in the ground behind them.
As I said, I ""personally"" dont want to shoot vanes out of a trad bow but others can do whatever they like. I just dont want newcomers to think that vanes are the new necessity. Yes Paul Schaffer used them, but he was chasing sheep and goats at 12,000 feet, not sitting for a whitetail in October.
To each their own without a doubt! I was just expressing my thoughts of people making way to big a deal of these things haha.