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By Roy Lloyd · Last reviewed: May 2026

Ravin Titanium Broadheads Review (2026): Grade 5 Titanium, 4.9 Stars, Zero Compromise
The Ravin Titanium Broadheads earn their rating. 4.9 stars across 27 real-world reviews is exceptionally high for any hunting product. Grade 5 titanium construction means the blades don't fail on impact with heavy bone at crossbow speeds — the scenario where cheaper mechanicals let hunters down. At $99.99 for three, they're a premium commitment. For the shot that matters most, they're the right choice.
Why Titanium Matters on Bone Impact
The failure mode for mechanical broadheads isn't a bad shot — it's a blade that folds or breaks on contact with the shoulder blade, spine, or heavy leg bone of a large animal. When a blade fails, the head loses its cutting diameter and you're left with a wound that may not bleed out efficiently. That failure is more common at the high speeds Ravin crossbows produce: more kinetic energy means more force on impact with bone.
Grade 5 titanium (Ti-6Al-4V) has a tensile strength substantially higher than the 6061 aluminum used in standard broadheads, at roughly 40% less weight for the same cross-section. The blades stay intact through impact with scapula, spine, and femur — the situations where the shot selection was right but the broadhead needed to deliver. That's what the $35 premium over the aluminum version buys.
Real-World Performance
Rear-Deploying Mechanics at High Velocity
At 400–500 fps, a fixed-blade broadhead creates enough drag to produce noticeable point-of-impact shift compared to field points. Rear-deploying mechanicals solve this by flying as a compact, aerodynamic profile until impact — the blades are folded back and only open when the force of impact drives them outward. The result is a flight path that tracks closely to your field point zero, making sight adjustments minimal.
What 4.9 Stars Across 27 Reviews Signals
Most hunting products settle at 4.3–4.6 stars at scale — the gap between expectation and field reality tends to create a distribution of critical reviews. 4.9 stars across 27 buyers putting these through actual hunts is a signal that the product does what it claims without significant failure modes. In the broadhead category specifically, one bad penetration story drops a rating fast — the Ravin Titanium heads aren't accumulating those stories.
Built for Ravin's Speed Range
Ravin designs these broadheads around the specific kinetic energy and bolt specification of their crossbow lineup. The blade retention, opening force, and ferrule geometry are tuned for 400–500 fps performance. Using a generic mechanical broadhead at those speeds can result in premature deployment or inconsistent blade retention that the Ravin-specific design eliminates.
What We Like
What We Don't Like
Who It's Best For
Buy the Titanium If You...
Consider Alternatives If You...
Score Breakdown
If you shoot a Ravin crossbow and you're selecting broadheads for a hunt that matters, the Titanium heads are the version you don't have to second-guess. The 4.9-star rating across 27 real hunts, Grade 5 titanium blade integrity, and Ravin-tuned rear-deploying mechanics make this the most proven broadhead in the lineup. The $35 premium over the aluminum version is earned on the shots that hit bone.