Since there's a constant swelling of the ranks, I tend to repost about this head at least once a year, for the once that never seen it.
I've developed this one about 4 years ago because I wasn't completely satisfied with how JUDOs work, since than I've only lost one, and that because it bounced of a rock and whent of a 2000 feet cliff
I shot at mongoose with all kinds of heads, Judo, rubber blunt, 3/8' nut screwed to shaft, broadhead, adder, 3/8" casing, steel blunt, .......none of them was the right combination, none of them covered all angles.
Having the ones doing good work by killing by shock, but not having the capability to stop themselves so they where easyly lost, The other ones would either leave a screeming animal with a goory mess, or have the critter run away with the arrow never to be seen again, or like this one time , I hit a mongoose it the jaw with a broadhead, she junped around a bit untill the arrow came loose than took off.
...So after a lot of thinking ( and that doesn't come easy to me ) I came up with a head that has uncomparable stopping quality in tall grass ( recently the came out with heads like the HEX and HUMMER, good heads, but don't stop nearly as good in tall grass) all the wile delivering awsome shocking power that kills small game even with marginal hits, this head is extremely easy to match to your broadhead weigth, this head is very easy on your wooden shafts when you hit hardwood and rocks, ( I spend a day testing it shooting all kinds of angles at rock hard Ironwood, and I think I only broke 2 cedar shafts) even shooting up into trees this head will grab something and come back down, this head is very backquiver friendly, because of the design works a bit like a Flu Flu, losing velocity after 20 yards or so, it's cheap and extremely durable,......just can't say enought
Here's how I make the TARANTULA :
Start with a bludgeon blunt
cut the pie shaped areas off
match to broadheads, 1/2 a 3/8 casing will give you a 125gr, full 3/8 casing 150gr, 100gr steel blunt 190gr, and so on.......
at this point you can ad (if you feel it necessary) a bleeder blade, or a nail, or a wood screw