Originally posted by Bob Gulliksen:
"They all work and they all don't work." Guys should work more on their shooting and quit trying to find a broadhead that is cure all for every thing that could happen. A bad hit is a bad hit no matter what BH you are using. Use what you have confidence in and don't worry about what everybody else is using. Up until about five years ago I and a lot of other guys were having a good time hunting and killing things and then we found out per the internet that we were doing everything wrong.(Wrong string, wrong bow, wrong arrow, wrong brace height, wrong quiver, wrong rest etc. and WRONG BROADHEAD)
You are right on, there, Bob. Lots of folks should read your post there, twice.
And Pat, to reply to your question - over the years I have lost exactly 1 animal with a Snuffer wherein increased penetration (what all the "experts" say Snuffers lack)- might have made the difference - that was an antelope buck I shot in the upper leg/shoulder joint with minimal penetration. My buddy in Montana hit an antelope similarly with a grizzly 190 the year before and didn't get his goat either, but a broadhead with a curl on the end like an elf shoe and minimal penetration. Of course that is a "one off" - well both cases are - and maybe the exception would prove the rule.
I've hit several whitetails high over the years - non-fatally above the spine through the "fins" of the backbone - probably 4 or 5 - penetration was not the issue, but hitting in a non-vital place was the issue. I have lost 1 animal that was gut shot with a Snuffer, small buck in Ohio, found him next spring.
The bigger game (elk sized and up) I mentioned in the first post are the sum-total of my experience with large game and Snuffers. That said, I'm not afraid to post an opinion about my several larger game shot with these heads (as well as the Old Man's), they don't number in the hundreds, but lots of guys like to post thier experience and expertise that have never even been there or done that.
I admit my mistakes, but also figure that over 30 years of serious bowhunting I'm not doing too bad.
R