I'm sure I wasn't the only one here who watched the Ranch Fairy/The Hunting Public collaboration video on broadhead sharpening. I ordered a Stay Sharp guide, a large sandpaper assortment off Amazon, and had ordered Cutthroat single bevel heads in late July. The heads were on backorder, which I knew at the time of the order...but the arrival/ship date keeps getting pushed back. As an insurance plan, I ordered some Magnus Stingers yesterday so I have a contingency plan. In the meantime, I decided last night to pull out the sharpening stuff and see what the method could do on an old 2-blade head that hit the dirt multiple times over the last year on groundhog shots (one kill, a few recurve misses).
I started out with this old head and blacked out the edge with a Sharpie.
I cycled from 220 grit (to set an edge) and went up through 2000 grit.
This works, plain and simple. I'm guessing I spent maybe 20 minutes on this old head. It was good practice. I'm excited to get some better quality heads to work with and see how scary sharp I can take them.
I started out with this old head and blacked out the edge with a Sharpie.
![](/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fi.imgur.com%2FfUp2ejvl.jpg&hash=6863d979c23660dafd6182b4f0d74e17)
![](/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fi.imgur.com%2F7thAWNel.jpg&hash=fdbfb8847287d50549d6bcba1250c3f3)
I cycled from 220 grit (to set an edge) and went up through 2000 grit.
![](/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fi.imgur.com%2FvOod1Jol.jpg&hash=2f17e45d79525978715a90845b377655)
This works, plain and simple. I'm guessing I spent maybe 20 minutes on this old head. It was good practice. I'm excited to get some better quality heads to work with and see how scary sharp I can take them.