Evan Hafer
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Yeah. Those are great. Their coating that they have on it is like, it's so easy to pull out. I got like a Teflon or some shit on them. Yeah, but you got to think that aids in penetration too. It has to, right? I mean, isn't that why guys like the thin diameter? Like Cam shoots those. I don't know if he's doing it now, but he was for a long time. He was shooting those four millimeter arrows. Right.
Yeah. Those are great. Their coating that they have on it is like, it's so easy to pull out. I got like a Teflon or some shit on them. Yeah, but you got to think that aids in penetration too. It has to, right? I mean, isn't that why guys like the thin diameter? Like Cam shoots those. I don't know if he's doing it now, but he was for a long time. He was shooting those four millimeter arrows. Right.
Those real skinny ones, but... The four mil. I like lighted Nox. And the four millimeter with the lighted Nox make me nervous. Why? Because Nox breaks sometimes. And they're more vulnerable because they got that little light inside of them instead of being a big solid piece of plastic. Right. You know? Like I always change them before hunts. I always put fresh ones on.
Those real skinny ones, but... The four mil. I like lighted Nox. And the four millimeter with the lighted Nox make me nervous. Why? Because Nox breaks sometimes. And they're more vulnerable because they got that little light inside of them instead of being a big solid piece of plastic. Right. You know? Like I always change them before hunts. I always put fresh ones on.
Those real skinny ones, but... The four mil. I like lighted Nox. And the four millimeter with the lighted Nox make me nervous. Why? Because Nox breaks sometimes. And they're more vulnerable because they got that little light inside of them instead of being a big solid piece of plastic. Right. You know? Like I always change them before hunts. I always put fresh ones on.
I never trust ones that have been sitting around. Never trust ones that I've shot already. I'll shoot them a bunch of times like for practice, but they break sometimes. And especially I'm not paying attention, so I might be accidentally touching arrows. I do the same thing.
I never trust ones that have been sitting around. Never trust ones that I've shot already. I'll shoot them a bunch of times like for practice, but they break sometimes. And especially I'm not paying attention, so I might be accidentally touching arrows. I do the same thing.
I never trust ones that have been sitting around. Never trust ones that I've shot already. I'll shoot them a bunch of times like for practice, but they break sometimes. And especially I'm not paying attention, so I might be accidentally touching arrows. I do the same thing.
Yeah, that's why when guides get real nerdy about like what helix, like what kind of helical you have on the veins and like what kind of twist you put your veins and you have to have a single bevel blade that twists for the broadhead in the exact same direction. Don't get a right twist with left veins. Then you'll get all fucked up.
Yeah, that's why when guides get real nerdy about like what helix, like what kind of helical you have on the veins and like what kind of twist you put your veins and you have to have a single bevel blade that twists for the broadhead in the exact same direction. Don't get a right twist with left veins. Then you'll get all fucked up.
Yeah, that's why when guides get real nerdy about like what helix, like what kind of helical you have on the veins and like what kind of twist you put your veins and you have to have a single bevel blade that twists for the broadhead in the exact same direction. Don't get a right twist with left veins. Then you'll get all fucked up.
But their idea is that you're trying to get the broadhead to spin through the animal. That's the whole idea behind the single bevel. Do you think that's true, though? There's something to it. Yeah. There's something to single bevels because of the cut, the way the edge is cut. So for people listening, single bevel means the edge angles in on one side.
But their idea is that you're trying to get the broadhead to spin through the animal. That's the whole idea behind the single bevel. Do you think that's true, though? There's something to it. Yeah. There's something to single bevels because of the cut, the way the edge is cut. So for people listening, single bevel means the edge angles in on one side.
But their idea is that you're trying to get the broadhead to spin through the animal. That's the whole idea behind the single bevel. Do you think that's true, though? There's something to it. Yeah. There's something to single bevels because of the cut, the way the edge is cut. So for people listening, single bevel means the edge angles in on one side.
Double bevel means it comes together as a point. So think of a blade, but a blade with only one side that you see where the steel is ground down to the edge. The other side doesn't have that.
Double bevel means it comes together as a point. So think of a blade, but a blade with only one side that you see where the steel is ground down to the edge. The other side doesn't have that.
Double bevel means it comes together as a point. So think of a blade, but a blade with only one side that you see where the steel is ground down to the edge. The other side doesn't have that.