HEAVY Medieval 1250lbs Windlass Crossbow - TESTED in Slo-Mo
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- Опубліковано 24 вер 2017
- Tod of www.todsworkshop.com discussing and demonstrating a powerful medieval military crossbow, spanned by windlass. Rate of fire tested and, for the first time, distance!
Draw weight 1250lbs = 567kg
Bolt weight 3.1oz = 88g
Spring steel bow prod. Steel fittings. Ash stock. Linen string.
Slow motion: • HEAVY Medieval 1250lbs...
Distance test: • HEAVY Medieval 1250lbs...
1st bolt 227yds = 207.5m
2nd bolt 235 yds = 214.8m
For the record...
The shooting was done on a private estate and when actually shooting the road was closed, we had spotters out and no people or moving vehicles were there when we were shooting. The (unoccupied) parked vehicles are around 30m off the shooting line with two lines of trees between them and us, which I felt to be safe.
Music: Angevin 120 loop by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution licence (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
Source: incompetech.com/music/royalty-...
Artist: incompetech.com/
If you are interested in medieval replica weapons take look at my websites:
todcutler.com for budget medieval knives
todsworkshop.com for custom knives, swords and crossbows
todsworkshop
todtodeschini - Наука та технологія
The most interesting feats of technology are the ones developed to perfection right before the next big breakthrough comes along
that is certainly true !
Well, tbh, crossbow technogy is still being improved today. Just look at all the interesting compound crossbows in the market nowadays. They would've seemed like alien technology to late medieval people.
Use a crossbow, they said. You are gonna be stealthy, they said.
"My ear is ringing"
Interestingly they are still used by special forces , as they won't set off (peaceful religion) suicide vests
As it turns out, bows are far from silent too. Not nearly as loud as a suppressed AR-cartridge rifle, but loud enough to turn heads in the dark.
Temenos Lykourgos yeah bows make a good “bong” noise. I put fur string silencers on mine which helped a little
@@TemenosL That's bullshit, you must be talking about recurve bows take a longbow or a compound bow and you won't have any problem
@@BigMikeTH3V1K1NG Either use Bow Limbs Dampener or get a longbow
"bro cover me while I reload"
I was looking for this... thank you.
More like “Reload me while i shoot the first one” :P
There is a reason they were used in teams, when possible. One reloads, one fires. The same discipline that led to musket volleys later.
More like "good thing for me I have this here bigass and thick pavise, think I'll just step into cover while I reload..."
While me reload, ye archers cover me please...
The distance test was really interesting cause it demonstrated a piece of historical fact from the battle of Crecy. The English archers feared the Geonesse crossbowmen because their crossbows outdistanced the average warbow. However, on the day of battle it rained in the morning. The archers could unstring their bows and keep the strings dry. The crossbows on the other hand couldn't be unstrung so their strings got wet, which affected the performance of the crossbows. So the wet strings forced the crossbowmen inside the range of the archers, which along with the fact that the Geonesse lacked their pavises played a major part in the English victory.
Was fun to see that the crossbow really did outdistance the longbow, when dry.
When it rained the Arbelest was hidden under the pavis for protection. Also lost with the pavis's on the French baggage train was the special tools for changing the string....bad day at Black rock.
This is not outdistancing a warbow. Maximum distance an English longbow could shoot with the lighter Mary Rose arrows was well over 250 yards. As an example, Joe Gibbs has shot >300 yards with a 170# longbow. It was even more one-sided if (as I believe was the case at Crecy) the archers had an elevation advantage.
Now I understand why the Eighty Years' War took so long....
Actually the 80yrs war took so long because Spain was financed by American silver (which it spent before it arrived) and the Dutch were financed by spectacular expansion in trade , and during the entire period the Spanish and Dutch continued to trade with each other : the Dutch buying wool and salt from Spain and the Spanish buying finished merchandise/manufactures from the Dutch.
r/woooosh
@@vinm300 it was a joke you jerkoff
@@vinm300 Find a bridge.
@@Wildwestwrangler , I'm a bit of an expert on the 80yrs war if you're welcome to cast a critical eye over one of my videos :-
"30yrs war Spain's swan song"
(The 30yr war is the conclusion of the 80yrs war)
ua-cam.com/video/t3wy7XbYkvA/v-deo.html
I can only blame Joerg Sprave for why this popped up in my recommended.
Somewhere in Germany, a fat and jolly laugh is echoing through the trees at your expense.
I wonder if he could make a 1250 lb crossbow...
Yep
"Let me show you it's features!"
Same!!
This guy is like that one history teacher everyone likes
235 yards = 214 metres for us metric folk.
ty
Rest of the World.
@GluttonousDragon nope
@GluttonousDragon nah
@GluttonousDragon Go back to watching Vox
This is what Dirty Harry would have been rockin' with in medieval times. "Doth thou feelest favored, Knave?!"
Oh very drole !!!!
There's always one, smh. 👆👆👆
@MichaelKingsfordGray: Love how you're trying to one-up him and his fantastic comment by springboarding off of it. What a tool you are.
Well? Dos't thou?
what thou must ask of thyself is, fired he but once or err.. once?
Tod:"let's do a range test!"
The family having a picnic in the next field:"huh, what's that bolt shaped thing coming this way?"
Thank you for settling an argument in my D&D session.
what argument
Pls don't keep us hanging
WHAT ARGUMENT
What argument?!
What argument jesus dont blueball us like that.
10:17 Because of air resistance, the perfect shooting range is not at an angle of 45°, but at a lower angle of 30°-ish, meaning: if you shoot at a 30°-ish angle, you can shoot even further.
thanks man - I have no knowledge of this subject, but I was wondering that myself
From what i remember, a bullet shape is at 21 while an arrow is at 31 and a bolt at 27
It's definitely not 30 degrees for most projectiles. I was a firm believer in 45 not being optimal with air resistance accounted for, but in most cases it either still is or is close enough.
@@MegaAdeny air drag/resistance will effectively remove 1/pi of your energy at 45 degrees
@@angrydragonslayer I've checked using air resistance calculators, and for arrow-type drag profile projectiles, 45 degrees is still optimal, while virtually the same distance can be achieved with 40 or so. But I obviously haven't done anything scientifically rigorous. Still, 30 degrees is definitely not conducive to shooting the furthest.
It is the medieval version of a 50 bmg rifle
Enrico what was the argument
No that was the ballista
@@theaniahlator7954 handheld
@@vladimirputin2449 fair enough. I actually have a homemade ballista
@@theaniahlator7954 that is really cool, what are the dimensions?
"Like any craftsman, I doubt what I do, a little bit." Absolutly agree :D
*Rhodoks start sweating*
Less tawking! Moar raiding!
*King Harlaus informs you that the Lords of Swadia are gathering for a feast in Praven*
@@Swedishmafia101MemeCorporation While the Vaegirs take Dhirim and Nords attack Suno
You gotta love swadia for their sense of duty
@@Swedishmafia101MemeCorporation *Butterlord
@@BuddhaBen93 omfg the butter. I was promised a sequel and received only endless caches of butter.
The couch arrived in two boxes four days early, which was great because we'd just moved into a new house and needed places to sit. My son and I put it together pretty quickly ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxitRzxya-XugamYgLwa_2G1gxPg4MCJHa . Another reviewer suggested inserting the seat into the side and I'm glad they did as the instructions weren't clear on that matter. It's incredibly light and slides easily across the wood floor, making it easy to move. It's firm, but comfortable. It will even be great to nap on. I got the gray, which definitely has strong blue undertones, but I'm okay with that.
OK but this is a crossbow video not a tutorial to move to another house budy why are you talking about a couch on a crosbow video??????
Beastly crossbow! I love the fact that you kept the power stroke at the historical length (or as close as you could) rather than simply making it as strong as you could.
Thank you for addressing the short power stroke. It's a reason I've suspected, but wondered about often and it's very nice to hear you clarify it.
Wow, dude's holding 1250 lbs. like nothing.
"in draw weight"
oh
Nice
(referring to the 69 likes)
You must be new to bows and what weight means when used in the context of bows
@@SevenPr1me The joke here is that people would assume the "heavy" and "1250lbs" together means the bow itself is 1250lbs. Not that the draw weight is 1250lbs.
@@pupper9474 "joke"
@@SevenPr1me I don't think you understand how jokes work, man.
Would a crossbow like this shoot through the French steel chest plate you guys were shooting with the 160lb bow?
@OneBadMonkee Huh, interesting, I would have expected a 1000 lb draw crossbow to really eff things up for the armor guy but apparently not even that suffices.
Croft it’s typically the draw length that matters more and not the poundage
@@lorcro2000 It's a combination of draw weight and draw distance. Crossbows have significantly higher draw weights, but comparatively short draw distances, compared to warbows.
@@lorcro2000 there's a reason why breast plates survived well into the gun age.
A ballista can go through that
I'd love to see it tested against 1mm, 2mm and 3mm mild steel plates
Me too, there's one "test" on youtube made by some guys in their backyard and the 1000lbs crossbow seemed pretty effective, but a lot of things with the "test" didn't look very good.
Knoloaify yeah, you would have to get the right steal, probably something soft underneath and so on.
Tod Todeschini...which kind of crossbow are the ones used in Gubbio and in other central Italy cities for the famous Palio della Balestra? Which part of Italy your family is coming from?
Why mild though?
Same
When you absolutely have to staple your adversaries armour to their chest...
This would deflect off the armour like the arrows did.
@Samuel Prince look at Skallagrim on UA-cam test out this crossbow and watch it bounce off the armour maybe causing a bruise
daylon boender To be fair, that armor is made VERY well.
@@samuelbrice3699 not skallagrims armour. This armour is average. You can make the same armour they had.
I imagined he'd be screeching orders like the crossbowman in Stronghold.
Atten-CHAWN!
wot? ol'dat way?.
PitchiiiiIIIIIiiiiing SHOT!
At teh' daubawl!
Interesting, historical and well-presented. 10/10, both for contructing the bow, and your factual demonstration.
I love how he says that it's "1250 pounds... In draw weight." as if we were all sitting here thinking he was holding a wooden stick that weighed 1250 pounds in his one arm.
Kur (aptly named) some people are better off letting people wonder if they are idiots .....rather than opening their mouth and removing all doubt..
Ako si Wokkawokka well I guess now we all know who can't take a joke around here...
Ako si Wokkawokka Hahaha
Could be the price though :)
Was just about to comment how was he holding 566kgs lmao
I shot an arrow in the air:
It fell to earth, I knew not where:
But, strangely, at my journey's end,
I found it again in the neck of a friend.
(Remembered from somewhere or other)
Funny, thanks!
I shot an arrow in the air; she fell to earth in Berkeley Square. - Alec Guinness in Kind Hearts and Coronets. 😀
Nick, it was Dennis Price, hero/villain, who shot down Lady Agatha in the balloon.
I felt that I should salute him too,
So I had a can and went to the loo.
Did a friend become a zombie ??
As an archery enthusiast, this was a very fun video to watch. One of those times Im glad the UA-cam recommendations were on point.
"A god fearing man needith to ponder thou limitations putith before him" Sir Harry The Dirty
Art thou deeds worthy of justice knave? wouldest thou enter the next world in peace or in torment? thou hast nine seconds to comply.....
Mine eyes see thy thoughts. Thou dost wonder, didst he loose six bolts, or merely five? Truth before God, in all of this excitement, I have lost the count myself. Verily, the question thou must ask thyself is thus: does fate favor me? Well, rapscallion, does it?
@@bubbleheadft Meself understandeth not this form of thou English language
*Sir Harold the Sullied.* GET IT RIGHT!
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣👍
I am impressed, that bow is amazing. Really like the sound, pure power.
9:36 footage of an Englishman performing surgery on a Frenchman 1455 AD.
Wow...thats great crossbow must be recomended for everyone. I loved your crossbow...Sir.
First video I watched from this guy and I loved it.... well done sir , well done .... you know what are you talking about and it was a very pleasant experience to me...
Well done
"OI! You got a licence for that?"
@@tods_workshop i think you got wooshed bro
@Habz Brah he said wooshed, not r/wooshed
you'll never take me alive
bump stock assault crossbows
You’ll never take me alive!
7:51 The sound of the bolt hitting is crazy.
Like on movies and anime
didnt know what draw weight was so i was looking at this guy like Hercules
Gorgeous piece of craftsmanship. I'd love to have one!
You know, it's funny, but I never realized that the windlass was actually removable before seeing you and Skallagrim's videos? I thought you had to fire with that huge clunky thing on your cheek.
Same tbh. I was surprised when he just clipped it off and shot. Then he just put it casually back on.
Heavy slower firing weapons like this where ideal on castle defense etc though.
Clunky handles not matter when you can duck out, sit down or pass to a loader and have a ale or pop to a new loophole.
longbow has more range, but this you can take your time, shoot and move easily, compact so only have to use a small hole, and this a lower odds to hit, and stronger walls.
might be harder to use on the field though!
You have to, they would reduce the power drastically if they were left on, and they are in the way.
Wouldn't the handles spin and buffet your face?
@@Zorro9129
You take them off before you fire the heavy crossbows or the crank is a one way crank. It's meant to draw the weapon back only and can free gear one way. There more of a crew served weapon so to say than a one man weapon..
Its a better design than some older heavy Asian ones that required you to use sheer man power and strengh to do it pulling from knees and up.
Seeing as one bolt deviated so far off course it went over a road, imagine if it had gone through a windscreen, I would have shot the arrows and bolts into the field as far away from the roadway as possible.
Spotters plus not a public road reduced the risk enough for me and I'm annoying as hell when it comes to firearms safety.
Ah, well, tough titty for the windscreen guy. Walmart Hu Akhbar!
They were slamming home some cheap cider too, seemed like a wild day out.
And this is why you are you and he is he.
Any guy who spends his free time making crossbows is cool in my book
Man, all of your videos start PERFECTLY. i freakin' love your content Tod, it's fascinating as hell to get an insight to medieval weaponry like this!
Wow, thanks!
@Tod's Workshop People like you are the reason I disable my YT ad blocker. Splendid work!
i love seeing people make these ancient weapons. your a true craftsman, and the bow looks great and works amazingly! i took up blacksmithing 4 months ago now, and what a deep respect for the smiths or any craftsman of days long ago. what a blessing to be able to live in such a place that’s so rich in history! your truly lucky! keep the great work coming.
You're*
Not thàt ancient. The windlass is from the Renaissance, just 500 years ago
I don't really have a lot to add, just wanted to say, really interesting and informative video, great job :)
+tod todeschini very interesting I loves anything medieval I carve. medieval spoons I subscribed to you 🐺👌🐾
WOW!!! That is some serious firepower. Awesome as ever and always fascinating to watch. Thank you.
Fascinating and so full of technical data! Well done.
shooting like that next to a picnic area might give you some data about scull penetration as well. nice plan
I was surprised to see the nut spinning during the slow mo shot...but I guess it would be a lot more strenuous on the components if it just snapped forward and had to dissipate that energy another way
The power stroke is very short on that thing. The bolt just does not accelerate much
Sorry, do what?
I noticed that too, really cool!
Imagine a wider bow would enable a longer power stroke. Be good for hunting politicians. :)
@@dannygjk even a big stick or piece of rock is good for hunting politicians
Great video, love the craftsmanship on the crossbow. Well done 👍🏻
That's quite an impressive piece of kit!
1250 lbs pull? are you trying to pierce castle walls with it?
No, just the people on top of the walls.
@@KikinCh1kin And the guy behind that person. Also the 2 walls behind him.
Gabriele Di Carlo And your forces on the other side
This compares to a longbow of about 160 pounds not even because of the short draw length plus other inefficiencies of the medieval crossbow like friction etc
@Samuel Prince the friction is not the same. I shoot my bows almost every day. Listen to what Tod says. Look at the side of a medieval crossbow and you'll see how much tension is pulling down on the string. And a longer draw is always better. The string has more time to push the arrow adding momentum. Its obvious. You sir have never shot a bow. Drawing a little and drawing a lot there is a huge difference.
Yes, finally a distance test!
Wonderful craftsmanship, thank you for showing us
Super video - thanks loads for that. 13 minutes, and I learnt more about crossbows than in my entire schooling... :)
I would love to see that bow's results with contemporary armor and shields, that would be an amazing video
Good to hear, I have a feeling it'll be worth the wait.
It probably wond be very impressive, even poor steel plating would gurantee the bolt wont penetrate your body. However the shock after the impact can render wearer of that armor to a condition where he can't continue fighting- cracked ribs, bruised lungs and concussion if bolt manage to hit head are very likely.
My guess is the shaft explodes into a million pieces if it were to hit something like the armor in a modern tank
@@steirqwe7956 Put some meat and bone under the armour and see what happens to it.
Short answer: The contemporary armor and shields might suffer dents, but the person underneath would be fine. Because bolts and arrows were exactly the things armor was protection from. If it wasn't effective it wouldn't be worn
With the UK police seizing butter knives in the name of public safety i'm surprised you can even own that thing
That's the great thing about crossbows in the UK. Totally legal to own one, no matter how powerful it is.
@@takeoischi4156 For how long? Until next week? Don't you get it?
"Maybe we can't have fully automatic guns but at least we can have semiautomatic ones."
"Maybe we can't have guns but at least we can have knives."
"Maybe we can't have fixed blades but at least we can have folding knives."
"Maybe we can't have folding knives but at least we can have butter knives."
"Maybe we can't have butter knives but at least we can have crossbows."
USA! USA! USA! @@westsenkovec
They took a spoon too!
@@takeoischi4156 For how long though, brother?
I put together a 120 pound ash/sinew crossbow with a 31 1/2" power stroke that can fling heavy oak shaft bolts over 360 yards. Now maybe over 400 since the sinew is fully cured. It really demonstrates how important the length of push is.
Excellent craftsmanship.
I want to get one (windless included) and a pavise shield to go along with it. It's the perfect shield for a crossbow.
7:51 That whistle the arrow makes is so satisfying
I don’t hear any whistle coming from the arrow. All I heard was the string stopping and the arrow hitting the target and stopping abruptly as a result.
I've always wondered why the stroke was so short. Thank you for the explanation.
Thing of savage beauty , I am now going to my shed.
Thanks Tod 😎🇬🇧
Now repeat your wonderful 'arrow versus breastplate' test with this beast! Imagine being a knight, with countless arrows glancing from your armor, watching a bolt like this hit you almost anywhere!
6:40 Just from that sound, I buy that this draws in the area of 1250lbs. I'd probably use ear protection as with a gun if I was shooting one of these!
Omg the effort of pulling the bolts out of the boss... whoa. Great video!
I learned a lot today watching your great video, thanks!
7:09 Tod, it's good to see your grounding cord attached. After all, these medieval instruments are very sensitive for electrostatic discharges ;-)
I'm assuming that that's a mic cord, no?
You know, I'm surprised you didn't paint the bolts, red, or neon orange, or tie red strings, or something to
them so you could find them easier...
They had like 5 guys out there lol
@@Daylon91 but no burgers or fries that I saw.
@@chaisemaurice8150 they're British right?
@@wafiqnasna4638 I think so. His bio on the website says Oxfordshire. Why?
Fake they planted it 11:44 slow it down it's 2 ft to the left of the tree when they pan over to it but 2 seconds before that tree was in frame plus the dude behind it on the Rd but no bolt sticking straight up out of the ground... Sucks liked this dude Wonder what else was faked
Another great research video, thank you!
I appreciate the work you do !
Damn near dry fired it at 8:22
I just think its crazy how, despite not having gunpowder really humans still managed to invent something like this that, by stopping power atleast, I'd say is comparable to a musket.
Burnblast277 easily so, I mean it can literally punch straight through a car door, it was truly the anti tank weapon of the late medieval era.
@@Dell-ol6hb Tank meaning, in medeival times, an armored knight on his horse. Right on! But the reload time limited effectiveness.
@@harrymoto6951 Same with a musket funny enough
Well... depends on the armor... 16th century Plate Armor?
ua-cam.com/video/XMT6hjwY8NQ/v-deo.html (I know that this technically isn't a piece from actual Full Plate. But it's still plated armor.)
Not much of a chance there. Shooting the horse, definitely. The human's a bit more of a luck game.
@@Dell-ol6hb It woudnt penetrate full plate armour buddy
Great video, I enjoyed your style of explaining, very clear and easy to understand. Thanks!
Would be neat if you chronograph and get the velocity of the bolts.
Would love to see one of these, go through a shield 🛡 metal breast plate, or the very least ballistics gel
8:22, oof,,, the string got tangled on the trigger.
These videos are fascinating, thank you!
Beautiful bow.
I realise its comparing apples and pears with so many variables but would you give a very rough ballpark figure in terms of foot poundage for that crossbow??? As compared to 150 or so ftlb for a .22 long rifle cartridge.
Thank you.
Great channel.
depends on the efficiency of the bow and string but 1250 lb x 6.5/12 ft = 677 ft.lb. For comparison, 160 lb @ 30 inches longbow = 470 ft.lb
120 J or 88.5 ft⋅lb
ua-cam.com/video/MMoL_SBD6gw/v-deo.html&lc=UgyJHcWT-oWsPn46XG14AaABAg.96PNv1MII3D96QeFi3zKAV
It looks like a great finishing on the hardware, I like the simplicity of it all, and yet it has power that no armor then would withstand. Getting impaled with a bolt from this weapon, in your steel armor is a scary thing to imagine.
That was really educational. Loved it!
Love your work Tod, keep it up😁
I read that medieval siege crossbows had forces up to 5000lbs... I guess owning one of those would be highly illegal? I would love to see one tested once.
Roman ballista 😂
He shoots it at 7:45
No, he shoots it at a shirt
Captain Wealthy Penis no, he shoots it WHILE at a field
No, he fires it.
He fires a bolt AT the crossbow?
Exceptional, Beautiful work.
I did some physics calcultaions on crossbows. I assumed that a crossbow is essentially a spring and did the calculations that way. Somone on a forum wondered about making a really small "assasin" crosbow. If you wanted a crossbow with a tiny power stroke of 10 mm to have the same "muzzle" enegry as a low end 9mm parabellum round you would need a draw weight of 100 metric tonnes. If you instead had a 1 m power stroke you would only need a draw weight of 100 kg. Length of power stroke makes a huge impact on what draw weight you need. Which is why crossbows have a much higher draw weight then normal bows for the same power.
Interesting that they needed to make such short power strokes because of metalurgical constraints, would have been much easier to make powerfull crossbows if they could have managed longer power strokes.
What a beast! I'm curious what that crossbow would do against armour at short range.
ua-cam.com/video/XMT6hjwY8NQ/v-deo.html
This one is a bit weaker, but ultimately the answer is if it was Plated Armor on a direct hit. Nothing really, a bit of denting in the armor, but the person wearing it would be just fine.
@@LeviathanTamer31 that dent still hurts..
@@ls200076 Eh, it'd leave you winded at worst, and not even feeling it in the best case scenario. Because you can't forget, Plate isn't worn against the skin. There's the Chainmail Hauberk and the Gambeson.
The latter would be the thing that cushions most blows. So it'd really just vary from suit to suit as well as personal toughness.
@@ls200076 just as Kylee said, I think the wearer would be just fine. The shooter, on the other hand, would be about to have a bad time.
-This is my BOOM stick!
-And this is my BOOM cross!
Absolutley AWESOME !
I like the stylish, back-pocket quiver for the bolts.
Has the energy imparted by an average bolt, shot by this crossbow, been stated anywhere within the 2,411 comments?
Regardless of the previous note, thank you very much for the video, and congratulations for the amazing bowyer skills you developed, fine gent.
Yes, it has
I would think a lighter draw weight x bow or bow with a much longer power stoke would deliver
more KE down range.
Why is this so cool? I can’t figure out why I love it so much.
if just watched 8 hrs of Tod video thanks to joerg!
awesome channel
Very nice crossbow!
Would be interested in the energy the bolt transfers into the target?
What I am trying to say is, we know the draw weight, we know the weight of the arrow - do you have any infos about the speed, ergo: did you chronograph it?
Ultimately it wold tell us, how effective such a design was and is in transferring energy vaio such a short power-stroke.
When it comes to energy transfer crossbows do have a quite ineffective design. The best bows have a nearly 100% energy transfer of draw weight to the arrow. With a crossbow you can be lucky if you achieve 40-50% of that. That said... 40-50% of 1250lb is still A LOT MORE than any person could draw with a bow.
Would be interesting to see similiar arrows/bolts released by bow vs crossbow on the same target with a pressure plate (or other measuring device) would fare.
@@jellysquiddles3194 You can work this out from the information in the video and Tod's answer above using some basic physics. Around 10% of the energy used in loading is transferred to the bolt.
@@jellysquiddles3194 1200+ pound crossbows could approach 200 J delivered to the target. Heavier (180-200 pound) warbows can get at least into the 160-170 J range with heavy arrows.
@@alexanderflack566 Thank you.
@@jellysquiddles3194 That depends on the type of prod used. Spring steel is actually a bad material for this purpose - while it can store a lot of energy, its also very heavy. A lot of that energy is wasted to flex the heavy steel limbs back into position. Your numbers will be correct for a steel prod, though a wood or horn-sinew composite crossbow will be able to achieve better efficiency.
I was worried the windlass was going to hit the trigger while you were taking it off. Would they traditionally use a wedge or anything to block the trigger from moving and preventing an accidental firing of the bow while loading? Seems like it would be easy to bump that big protruding trigger.
Are you okay Danny Boy? You seem a tad angry.
He's firing a deadly weapon on an unsecured range with people close by, and ignoring safe handling practices in the process. The alcoholic beverage isn't helping his image. OP is right to question it.
When he's cranking it, the bow isn't loaded. If it gets triggered, it's at most a few seconds wasted.
I wouldn't say that. Dry firing any type of bow system is stressful as hell on the bow structure. Sorry, but no way in hell would i want half a ton of kinetic energy bouncing around with barely any way out in my hands. At best it would hurt your hands and arms like hell, at worst the structure would shatter and you'd be full of shrapnel.
It's made of steel and solid wood. I honestly doubt it would shatter, it seems very sturdy. Besides, mildly hurting himself=/= being a danger.
this crossbow is awesommme... love it
Amazing work mate!
Would it be normal for a soldier who is in a fortress or dug in to have multiple bows every time he turns another one is loaded?
Depending on the situation, yes, there were "support teams" for the shooter to reload several crossbows to switch between.
This is by far the most British thing I've ever seen.
And then putting malt vinegar on it?
Nah, not enough Longbow
+Birdnose Did the British invent the windlass?
You don't get out much
+Andrew Robertson. Probably gets out a couple of times a week under the supervision of a handler.
Looks scary powerful, I like it.
Im addicted to these crossbows.