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 th-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.
The modern crossbow is still used by certain special forces,as it is silent and deadly at a distance: Special forces in both Greece and Turkey also continue to employ the crossbow. Spain's Green Berets still use the crossbow as well. In Asia, some Chinese armed forces use crossbows, including the special force Snow Leopard Commando Unit of the People's Armed Police and the People's Liberation Army. Crossbow - Wikipedia Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Crossbow
In most states in Australia, the crossbow is illegal to own and use. The only exception is competition specifically for the crossbow but the chance of getting a license is probably remote.
Absolutely stupid and authoritarian lol weapons don't hurt people....people do. I like Australian people but their government is absolutely tyrannical in a lot of ways. Can't have firearms, can't have crossbows, can't have t-shirt cannons as the other comment mentioned, idk let's just go right to banning steak knives and pointy sticks and tools and rocks. So sad to see
Yup. I used to use a crossbow for rabbits on my farms in Tassie. When they were banned, I got a firearm licence and have now got several rifles. The ban hardly had the effect they were after.
Things crossbows have going for them over firearms; quality arrows will pass right through the same sandbags armies use to stop bullets. Compared to guns, arrows are virtually silent. Bows/crossbows are easy to make and maintain, and ammunition is unlimited, if you're creative/crazy enough. Arrows can be packed with enough boomboom powder to destroy a car...
@@XtreeM_FaiL some modern crossbows can be pretty decent out to 100 yards which doesn’t sound like much but your average person is a pretty lousy shot at ranges shorter than that even with a firearm. Granted I’d rather take the gun, but I think a crossbow in the hands of a good hunter would be pretty effective at handgun ranges. Main disadvantage is gonna be volume of fire I’d think.
@@Tarumarugan most urban combat/assassination scenarios occur within spitting distance, and most cities have gunshot detectors set up everywhere. Bows, crossbows and slingbows are absolutely terrifying in an urban setting, if used properly
"unregulated crossbow" is the most UK thing i've ever heard no offense. I'm from canada and i'm so glad I can at least enjoy airguns. i've been target shooting since I was 7 years old and it's the only thing which truly relaxes me and makes me happy.
Joerg Sprave tends to agree with Fact Boi about the deliciousness of crossbows and more importantly... *REPEATER CROSSBOWS!!* Let him show you its features!!
First, please cite your source for the Urban II condemnation of crossbows. Can't find a source for it anywhere, though I can find many people parroting, "Pope Urban II banned crossbows in 1096." Second, Pope Innocent II banned traditional archery as well, not just crossbows. "We prohibit under anathema that murderous art of crossbowmen and archers, which is hateful to God, to be employed against Christians and Catholics from now on."
First seen BY ME in 1999 LOTR Fellowship of the Ring then... 2001's Harry Potter, Rubeous Hagrid had 1. 😁 What a colourful history for an instrument of terror! 👍👍
I've long suspected the most ancient crossbows are actually the many similar types from various southeast Asian countries. They're very simply design-wise, and were known among natives who never came into contact with any Chinese unfluence. I think it's most likely the crossbow was originally invented and spread in southeast Asia, but the idea did eventually reach China a few millennia BC (ca between 3000 and 2000 BC), and Chinese inventors then tried to improve upon the existing single-shot designs (especially in terms of triggers) and later also invented at least two different repeater designs (as weaker as those were and are, due to obvious performance limitations). I don't know enough about the trade links between the Mediterranean, south Asia and China in antiquity to say for sure whether the early European crossbow designs by the Greeks and Romans were inspired a bit by Chinese crossbows, or were figured out independently, along the same basic lines. (After all, we do also see simpler crossbows occur in Europe during the Middle Ages, beyond the rolling nut lock and trigger pioneered by the Romans, in a system similar to Chinese triggers of single-shot crossbows). Much of the absolute earliest history of the crossbow, in late prehistory and antiquity, is shrouded in unclear facts, the relatively detailed finds and historical records from China being one of the few exceptions, and even there, we don't know for sure when exactly the crossbow was invented as a concept and whether China borrowed the idea or was the actual originator, rather than just major early innovator).
Could you do a video on how submachine guns like the Thompson and MP40 or perhaps the Mauser of world war1 changed short-range combat in urban Warfare or perhaps how barbaric the trench weapons of World War 1 dated back to Medieval Times
I live about twenty away from a town called Mountain City, Tennessee. The town has the distinction of two drive-by crossbowings and at least two muzzleloader drive-bys. I don't know of anywhere else that claim that.
under australian (NSW) law they're classed as "An armour piercing projectile weapon" and regulated under separate, but similar to, firearms law. You can buy them over the counter with an 18+ photo ID card in queensland
The bow shoots faster than a crossbow only in the first minutes of combat, but then the archer gets tired and needs rest. After each series of shots, the archer will rest for a couple of minutes. And a crossbowman can shoot for hours without getting tired. As a result, over the course of several hours of combat, the rate of fire of the bow and crossbow is likely to be comparable.
10:20 you just gave me an awesome idea {art project} SIMON WHISTLER THE LISTENER, YOU AND YOUR CREW ARE TOPS, AND THE WAY YOU ROLLS THOSE FACTS OFF LIKE SO MUCH ACHIN BACON, THAT IT LULLS MY soul TO THE UPPER POSITIVE PLACE. thank you. With fleeting regards, WARDALEATH THE BLACKEST.
Despite some having monsterous draw weights spring steel back then couldnt get much draw length so even a 1200 lb couldnt get as big of an energy output difference as draw weight difference between it an a 180lb longbow Lever drawn ones could rival energy of a longbow and had chunkier projectiles so would be a bit better on armor Composite or wood ones would have a smaller draw weight but come closer to steel bow output due to more draw length and efficiency
That's awesome : p you must live in a country and/or state with some semblance of freedom my man lol I'm not surprised Australia regulates crossbows though, I'm sure rocks and sticks will be next
For real. It's also interesting to see the similarities between the antique regulations of crossbows and modern regulation of firearms. It seems governments love to ban weapons that can equalize the people's power to there own and when thay ban it they make up a reason that seems to benefit society and not just them.
You've covered the subject very well. The only thing perhaps that was missed was crossbows could not be shot from horseback. At least multiple shots. Whereas with a bow mounted Cavalry was Force multiplier.
15th century Prussia, Italy and France saw the use of mounted crossbowman and Tallhoffer's manual of martial arts has a drill for them, there's also a Burgundian depiction from about 1470 and an account of mounted crossbowman from Philipp Von Seldeneck's War book., Their tactics were largely the same and were borrowed from Asian horse archers. The idea was to demoralize and break-up the line of pikeman so that traditional calvary could engage in traditional tactics. The crossbows were ratchet or lever-cocked, making it possible for a horseman to reload while riding.
@@alternator7893 i read an article about a small crossbow used by scottish border reavers on horseback. it could be cocked with a built-in lever and fired with one hand. sort of a zip gun for the medieval days.
It is easier to span a a simple stirrupless crossbow by pushing down the cord towards the nut rather than sitting on the ground and pulling back...also much quicker....
As an Archer that lives in the UK, I was surprised how easy it was to get all the equipment I needed when I first started. I do find the looks I get as I walk down the street with my bow and quiver full of arrows amusing, as I walk to the local range.
Lol we walk about with open carry pistols and rifles in the southern United States now as I moved from Scotland. There is little crime here and noone bats an eye at it.
@@chiefslinginbeef3641 Maine has low key the best gun laws in the country but they don’t get any heat because they don’t make it their cultural identity like in the south. Everyone freaked out because Texas passed constitutional carry, Maine’s had it for decades.
Think the Greek and Roman uses an torsion based mechanism rather than a bow and the crossbow was an later invention who might come from China. On the other hand putting an bow on the end of an stock with an rail for the arrow is an kind of obvious thing to do at least in hindsight.
It's also kind of ridiculous. Is there some kind of epidemic of crossbow attacks or abuse? There was one incident, one which could have just as easily (and probably more effectively) been performed with a knife or other weapon. But no, because there was this one anecdotal case, we "need to do something about it". It's an absurd overreaction. It's understandable that the victim would say such things. I would not expect a victim to look at the big picture and put things into perspective given their immediate trauma. But that doesn't mean everyone else needs to overreact.
Well actually an arrow has a staggering armour piercing ability if you think about it. Small point with a massive projectile mass compared to firearms makes it a far better choice than you would expect.
@@TheRealHungryHobo Well ok, but there are also videos on youtube of Arrows going right through light kevlar vests and even steel chest plates, it just highly depends on the angle you are hitting at if you ricochet or if the tip bites. There are definitely cases of longbow arrows going through steel plating. Also I'm not saying that arrows are somehow superior to bullets in any way, just that they can perform much better than you'd expect from a technology this old.
@@Noise-Bomb For sure, bows are crazy powerful, way more powerful than most people would imagine. Like the video says, they used the bigger crossbows to knock down stone walls. I'm just saying that a set of proper metal armor will stop an arrow cold - that's why they wore it.
I'm not sure maybe it's different for crossbows but that repeating crossbow ( 3:15 ) wouldn't be semiautomatic it would be some sort of lever action or something describing the manual portion of the reload. With semiautomatic the forces used to expell the projectile is also used to re chamber the weapon. I own several repeating crossbows and wile thay shoot fast next to a normal crossbow it's slow even compared to a lever or bolt action firearm but compared to real semiautomatic it might as well be a turtle on heroin.
Missed something important, Simon: archery (including crossbows) were generally used as area weapons instead of point weapons. Crossbow precision is only possible at short ranges (20 to 60 meters, hitting a specific individual), so the 100-to-400-meter figure is for a number of crossbowmen polluting a piece of real estate with their massed bolt launches. English longbowmen also did that--launched a large number of arrows rapidly at long range into a piece of ground to inflict casualties. This technique of fire was carried over into the firearms age. The shoulder-to-shoulder Napoleonic-era musket tactics mimicked the crossbow formations of old. All the way up to the repeating rifle, infantrymen would form a firing line and shoot into a piece of ground at distances of a kilometer or more into a terrain feature. Shooting at point targets (individual enemy soldiers or putting bullets through a bunker slit) takes place at closer distances, often less than 100 meters.
A few years ago we ran some youth activities including Cross-bow firing at straw targets. We assumed the risk assessment levels were same as normal archery. Was only afterwards when talking with a senior manager we found out the risk and insurance levels were much higher.
A crossbow is used a crazy man to shoot a neighbor. The government's answer is to regulate the crossbow. What way do you stop evil? Question 1- Are you going to kill people? Question 2- You promise not to kill people? Question 3- Are you a criminal? Register your crossbow. Pay a fee and keep it in a case when not in use. Remember what you promised. Cheerio! Evil can't be legislated away.
Can you do the history of The Thunderbirds? The airshow, not the TV show. Their history is decades long, tragic, and they've entertained millions. Thank you from the YF-23 guy, and Nellis AFB, home of The Thunderbirds!
Cross bows are cool but I think long bows with highly trained bowman would be much more effective. Because of much longer range and can shoot more arrows
It's all in the logistics. Also, the range is maybe slightly longer but not significantly. Plus, a crossbowman can shoot basically all day until he runs out of bolts. Actual archery on the other hand is a straight-up workout and a longbowman will be shooting for maybe an hour, before his efficiency goes way down due to exhaustion.
@@darthplagueis13 well what about the Comanche bow. Check out one of archery expert Lars Anderson's videos pretty cool not long range but cool all the same.
@@larchman4327 Well, the Comanche bow is a short bow, for one. It should also be noted that it developed in a very different context to european crossbows and longbows, which were locked in an arms race with advancements in armour technology. In other words: the effective range for crossbows and european longbows is shorter because you need to shoot an arrow or bolt at a relatively short range to have any chance of penetrating armour (and even then, late medieval plate armour was nigh impenetrable with actual kills mostly being the result of hits into the face when the visor of the helmet was up or just generally lucky shots/material failure with the armour). In the americas, metal armour was not a major factor in warfare and thus an arrow could be considered effective at a far greater range.
no? we find better ways to do everything, why would we stop here? if you try to stop than you will be killed by someone who outpaces you in the arms race.
@@NORTH_CAROLINA_REAPER Not one group of people or another, friend - all humanity collectively. Gotta stop thinkin' "us or them", & try to focus on "we". Thanks for your reply.
Actually, crossbows do have a modern military application -- they're much quieter than a so-called silenced weapon. But they're also not as lethal, and they're just another large piece of kit to carry around...
You also have the benefit of not having to leave concealment for a quiet option, unlike an edge that makes it obvious that you are the wrong thing if not perfect.
Drawing a warbow isn't something you *_have to_* have been training from childhood to manage. It requires long and regularly maintained training (skimp on it a while, and you loose it), but not decades of it …and you DON'T draw a warbow with your arms, but mainly with your back muscles. (hence why you draw a warbow with a completely different stance, compared to, say, modern sport archers) Try to draw it using your arms, and you will fail and/or hurt yourself.
Well, not decades but it's still several months of training until you can even draw a bow of that strength for several consecutive shots, and then even longer until you start actually hitting your target.
@@ZarlanTheGreen I'd say it depends. Crossbows have the advantage of letting you figure out the trajectory of the bolt depending on your aim more easily since you don't have to invest additional muscle once it's cocked whereas you can only keep a bow fully drawn for a few seconds.
@@darthplagueis13 Crossbows do give a bit of an advantage, in letting you keep it steady, but it's not like you keep a bow drawn for more than a brief moment. Any difference in training required for accuracy, isn't all that significant. (the benefits of the crossbow, is likely more pronounced in newbies, and quickly decrease into insignificance, as you train)
@@ZarlanTheGreen Not keeping a bow drawn kind of was my point. Once you've fully drawn the bow you don't have much time to adjust your aim all that much. A crossbow on the other hand can be aimed like a rifle, though the exact ballistics are of course quite different
I do some archery, I own 3 crossbows and a stone bow in addition to my bow. They are fun to hit targets with, like any weapon within reason, they’re as deadly as the person wielding it. I don’t hunt I have no need to harm any animal for pleasure, just to be clear.
The joy of hunting isn't in taking a animals life it's about becoming a part of the food chain, not just bringing home food but actually providing for your family, and knowing that you are part of one of the greatest conservative efforts in human history. Humans my have started the problems in the first place but the fact is without hunting almost the entire world's ecosystems would collapse.
When I was a kid, my Dad bought a crossbow (I think motivated by some break-ins locally). After getting it home, he fired it at the garage door for a test. The bolt went clean through the door, through the engine of the car inside, and lodged itself in the brick wall at the back. Since then, I have always thought of crossbows as pretty serious things! Not to be messed about with!
I've got a 30lb roleplay Xbow and a 250lb real Xbow. I fired a pencil from the 30lb on and it went straight through a sofa (we use massive foam heads on the bolts for actually shooting at each other). I've not dared fire the 250lb one at anything but a target with a few feet of wood behind it. Lost a few of the bolts due to their metal shaft deforming under the impact.
@GEL yeah no it didn't. You've witnessed one shot from a crossbow as a kid and I hunt with them every summer. They're powerful yeah but bolts essentially explode if you hit anything harder than wood that's thicker than about a quarter.
Greater crossbow regulation, cause its not like people in the Uk don’t get murdered with everything from kitchen knives to pipes, to medium sized rocks. It’s the crossbows that are the problem, not the fact that people are willing to murder each other with common household objects.
I literally just did a quick google search and saw that most modern crossbows can't effectively shoot powerfully or accurately at 100 yards... Let alone the ranges described in this video... Are you sure your statements are accurate?
I knew an old Gypsy who told me how he once saw a low flying Tornado Jet Fighter taken out by a crossbow. He didn't tell me the where, or the when, but he told me the 'how', and while I never knew the man to lie, I do believe him. Obviously, I can't verify he actually saw it. But the 'how' is certainly theoretically viable, and the same method has been used successfully on many paramilitary actions around the World against Helicopters.
Robert Jordan touched on the reintroduction of crossbows in his Wheel of Time series, with many of the reasons for their creation within that universe as in the real world, they were easier to train than bowmen for example.
Holy crap these was a painful episode to watch. Weapons focused episodes were never this channels strong suit, but this was far more egregious than normal, just all manner of technical, historical and just plain factual inaccuracies laced throughout the entire script.
anybody can build their own crossbows in any country. of course authoritarian governments will make it illegal, but when patience runs out among us common folk....
Interesting side note, the crossbow equipped some of the early conquistadors in addition to having firearms. I'm pretty sure Cortez's force had crossbows in fact.
Yeah, the whole “firearms immediately made the crossbow obsolete” argument is kinda wrong. Obviously they had greater firepower, and the noise alone was a great psychological weapon, but firearms at that point were still far from being able to match a crossbow’s accuracy and range
Crossbows have been used in modern conflicts, notably some of the eastern European conflicts, when the resistance fighters realised that a crossbow arrow will go through modern body armour and even sandbag defences that would stop a rifle round. And you can make your own arrows. And they are almost silent.
very good research Simon! if anyone is interested in Chinese Crossbow reproductions i make and shoot them
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 th-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.
The modern crossbow is still used by certain special forces,as it is silent and deadly at a distance:
Special forces in both Greece and Turkey also continue to employ the crossbow. Spain's Green Berets still use the crossbow as well. In Asia, some Chinese armed forces use crossbows, including the special force Snow Leopard Commando Unit of the People's Armed Police and the People's Liberation Army.
Crossbow - Wikipedia
Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Crossbow
In most states in Australia, the crossbow is illegal to own and use. The only exception is competition specifically for the crossbow but the chance of getting a license is probably remote.
T-shirt cannons are also illegal in many Australian states.
Absolutely stupid and authoritarian lol weapons don't hurt people....people do. I like Australian people but their government is absolutely tyrannical in a lot of ways. Can't have firearms, can't have crossbows, can't have t-shirt cannons as the other comment mentioned, idk let's just go right to banning steak knives and pointy sticks and tools and rocks. So sad to see
Yup. I used to use a crossbow for rabbits on my farms in Tassie. When they were banned, I got a firearm licence and have now got several rifles. The ban hardly had the effect they were after.
In your country you're not allowed anything fun.
like it can stop a competent carpenter in making one hahaha
Great video! Thanks for spreading the word about these supremely cool historical objects!
Things crossbows have going for them over firearms; quality arrows will pass right through the same sandbags armies use to stop bullets. Compared to guns, arrows are virtually silent. Bows/crossbows are easy to make and maintain, and ammunition is unlimited, if you're creative/crazy enough. Arrows can be packed with enough boomboom powder to destroy a car...
First you have to get really close.
@@XtreeM_FaiL some modern crossbows can be pretty decent out to 100 yards which doesn’t sound like much but your average person is a pretty lousy shot at ranges shorter than that even with a firearm. Granted I’d rather take the gun, but I think a crossbow in the hands of a good hunter would be pretty effective at handgun ranges. Main disadvantage is gonna be volume of fire I’d think.
@@Tarumarugan they have semiautomatic self-cocking crossbows now, with bolt capacities up to 12 per magazine.
@@Tarumarugan most urban combat/assassination scenarios occur within spitting distance, and most cities have gunshot detectors set up everywhere. Bows, crossbows and slingbows are absolutely terrifying in an urban setting, if used properly
@@XtreeM_FaiL somehow i don't see a hundred yards as being "really close." a lot of folks can't hit anything at a hundred yards with a rifle!
Poor Uruk-hai didn’t get a mention 😔
"unregulated crossbow" is the most UK thing i've ever heard no offense. I'm from canada and i'm so glad I can at least enjoy airguns. i've been target shooting since I was 7 years old and it's the only thing which truly relaxes me and makes me happy.
Joerg Sprave tends to agree with Fact Boi about the deliciousness of crossbows and more importantly... *REPEATER CROSSBOWS!!* Let him show you its features!!
That guys air cannons are super cool too. I made one myself and got a railroad spike to shoot out faster than I could track it.
@@nolanlojo103 Ha! Noice!
1:05 - Chapter 1 - Invention
1:55 - Chapter 2 - China
6:05 - Chapter 3 - The ancient greeks & romans
7:40 - Chapter 4 - Medieval use
10:20 - Chapter 5 - Richard the lionheart
11:35 - Chapter 6 - Genoese crossbowmen
Reminds me of Brian the Meme accountant
First, please cite your source for the Urban II condemnation of crossbows. Can't find a source for it anywhere, though I can find many people parroting, "Pope Urban II banned crossbows in 1096." Second, Pope Innocent II banned traditional archery as well, not just crossbows. "We prohibit under anathema that murderous art of crossbowmen and archers, which is hateful to God, to be employed against Christians and Catholics from now on."
That’s so British. Regulation and more regulation.
How do you talk about this topic without mentioning crossbow prowess of important historical figures Joffrey Baratheon and Chewbacca?
Hahahaha 😂
First seen BY ME in
1999 LOTR Fellowship of the Ring then...
2001's Harry Potter, Rubeous Hagrid had 1. 😁
What a colourful history for an instrument of terror! 👍👍
I've long suspected the most ancient crossbows are actually the many similar types from various southeast Asian countries. They're very simply design-wise, and were known among natives who never came into contact with any Chinese unfluence. I think it's most likely the crossbow was originally invented and spread in southeast Asia, but the idea did eventually reach China a few millennia BC (ca between 3000 and 2000 BC), and Chinese inventors then tried to improve upon the existing single-shot designs (especially in terms of triggers) and later also invented at least two different repeater designs (as weaker as those were and are, due to obvious performance limitations).
I don't know enough about the trade links between the Mediterranean, south Asia and China in antiquity to say for sure whether the early European crossbow designs by the Greeks and Romans were inspired a bit by Chinese crossbows, or were figured out independently, along the same basic lines. (After all, we do also see simpler crossbows occur in Europe during the Middle Ages, beyond the rolling nut lock and trigger pioneered by the Romans, in a system similar to Chinese triggers of single-shot crossbows). Much of the absolute earliest history of the crossbow, in late prehistory and antiquity, is shrouded in unclear facts, the relatively detailed finds and historical records from China being one of the few exceptions, and even there, we don't know for sure when exactly the crossbow was invented as a concept and whether China borrowed the idea or was the actual originator, rather than just major early innovator).
Could you do a video on how submachine guns like the Thompson and MP40 or perhaps the Mauser of world war1 changed short-range combat in urban Warfare or perhaps how barbaric the trench weapons of World War 1 dated back to Medieval Times
I live about twenty away from a town called Mountain City, Tennessee. The town has the distinction of two drive-by crossbowings and at least two muzzleloader drive-bys. I don't know of anywhere else that claim that.
Sounds like you win...wow...
Back in about 2000 a guy in the Dakota's threw a tomahawk at the back window of a car for some reason - don't know if that counts as a drive by-
I live near trade Tennessee right down the road. Lol
I'm just across the hill from there in north cackilacky
Woah. First time I've ever seen the words "drive by crossbowings" used together.
Cool story bro.
Time to go play a game of Lawn Darts!
under australian (NSW) law they're classed as "An armour piercing projectile weapon" and regulated under separate, but similar to, firearms law. You can buy them over the counter with an 18+ photo ID card in queensland
i think crossbows are great.
The bow shoots faster than a crossbow only in the first minutes of combat, but then the archer gets tired and needs rest. After each series of shots, the archer will rest for a couple of minutes. And a crossbowman can shoot for hours without getting tired. As a result, over the course of several hours of combat, the rate of fire of the bow and crossbow is likely to be comparable.
10:20 you just gave me an awesome idea {art project} SIMON WHISTLER THE LISTENER, YOU AND YOUR CREW ARE TOPS, AND THE WAY YOU ROLLS THOSE FACTS OFF LIKE SO MUCH ACHIN BACON, THAT IT LULLS MY soul TO THE UPPER POSITIVE PLACE. thank you.
With fleeting regards, WARDALEATH THE BLACKEST.
Crossbows: the original armor piercing weapon
Amazing video
I didn't want it to end, I wanted to hear about how guns changed things up
Can we get a video about the chain mail hotpants at 11:44 ?
Despite some having monsterous draw weights spring steel back then couldnt get much draw length so even a 1200 lb couldnt get as big of an energy output difference as draw weight difference between it an a 180lb longbow
Lever drawn ones could rival energy of a longbow and had chunkier projectiles so would be a bit better on armor
Composite or wood ones would have a smaller draw weight but come closer to steel bow output due to more draw length and efficiency
Crossbow regulations 🤔 we made one in boyscouts with the plans out of a popular mechanics magazine. Then went deer hunting with it
That's awesome : p you must live in a country and/or state with some semblance of freedom my man lol I'm not surprised Australia regulates crossbows though, I'm sure rocks and sticks will be next
For real. It's also interesting to see the similarities between the antique regulations of crossbows and modern regulation of firearms. It seems governments love to ban weapons that can equalize the people's power to there own and when thay ban it they make up a reason that seems to benefit society and not just them.
Love these weapon Sideprojects! Learning so much, thank you 😊
@1:10 Uhhhh, Just a quick heads up: Your coin purse is hanging out in the breeze a bit there brother.
You've covered the subject very well. The only thing perhaps that was missed was crossbows could not be shot from horseback. At least multiple shots. Whereas with a bow mounted Cavalry was Force multiplier.
15th century Prussia, Italy and France saw the use of mounted crossbowman and Tallhoffer's manual of martial arts has a drill for them, there's also a Burgundian depiction from about 1470 and an account of mounted crossbowman from Philipp Von Seldeneck's War book., Their tactics were largely the same and were borrowed from Asian horse archers. The idea was to demoralize and break-up the line of pikeman so that traditional calvary could engage in traditional tactics.
The crossbows were ratchet or lever-cocked, making it possible for a horseman to reload while riding.
@@alternator7893 i read an article about a small crossbow used by scottish border reavers on horseback. it could be cocked with a built-in lever and fired with one hand. sort of a zip gun for the medieval days.
Were there not cases of commandos in ww2 using crossbows ?
And here I am in denmark where you need a license to have a slingshot 😂
Good video 👍
Yeah, but VAMPIRES.
It is easier to span a a simple stirrupless crossbow by pushing down the cord towards the nut rather than sitting on the ground and pulling back...also much quicker....
As an Archer that lives in the UK, I was surprised how easy it was to get all the equipment I needed when I first started.
I do find the looks I get as I walk down the street with my bow and quiver full of arrows amusing, as I walk to the local range.
It’s sharp sticks and string.
A steak knife is far more lethal at close range (in a crowd), yet nobody gets their knickers in a knot over this.
@@MrTexasDan they literally do there though.
Lol we walk about with open carry pistols and rifles in the southern United States now as I moved from Scotland. There is little crime here and noone bats an eye at it.
@@chiefslinginbeef3641 Maine has low key the best gun laws in the country but they don’t get any heat because they don’t make it their cultural identity like in the south. Everyone freaked out because Texas passed constitutional carry, Maine’s had it for decades.
Think the Greek and Roman uses an torsion based mechanism rather than a bow and the crossbow was an later invention who might come from China.
On the other hand putting an bow on the end of an stock with an rail for the arrow is an kind of obvious thing to do at least in hindsight.
The greek belly bow wasnt torsion. I agree balista and scopions were torsion
Great video!!
Only a place like England would try to regulate crossbows. Crazy people always will exist if you don’t have a crossbow he probably used a knife.
Wow 2 likes at the time of posting yet the video has only been uploaded for seconds
Simon is so consistent, I pre like!
I run SimonTube all day, his new videos instantly queue up for me 😁.
@@clownbasher2911 and your reply just exposes the very failings of TH-cam.
Not a single old parchment so far has had a crossbow haha
Have you done anything on the black tom explosion
That news about Anthony Lawrence should have been very sad for that woman's family.
“Greater crossbow regulation”. Wow British and American English really are different. As an American that sentence is a bunch of nonsense to my ears.
It's also kind of ridiculous. Is there some kind of epidemic of crossbow attacks or abuse? There was one incident, one which could have just as easily (and probably more effectively) been performed with a knife or other weapon. But no, because there was this one anecdotal case, we "need to do something about it". It's an absurd overreaction. It's understandable that the victim would say such things. I would not expect a victim to look at the big picture and put things into perspective given their immediate trauma. But that doesn't mean everyone else needs to overreact.
You don't understand the British mindset. (Nor the Aussie one.) No one wants to become like America.
@@WaddedBliss you’re right I don’t understand being afraid of sharp sticks and string. What a baby.
His unregulated crossbow. *laughs in American
How is your school shooting?
Well actually an arrow has a staggering armour piercing ability if you think about it. Small point with a massive projectile mass compared to firearms makes it a far better choice than you would expect.
th-cam.com/video/Ej3qjUzUzQg/w-d-xo.html
Not really.
KE=1/2mv^2 A bullet's advantage in v is so much more than an arrows advantage in m and the v is squared even.
@@TheRealHungryHobo Well ok, but there are also videos on youtube of Arrows going right through light kevlar vests and even steel chest plates, it just highly depends on the angle you are hitting at if you ricochet or if the tip bites. There are definitely cases of longbow arrows going through steel plating. Also I'm not saying that arrows are somehow superior to bullets in any way, just that they can perform much better than you'd expect from a technology this old.
@@Noise-Bomb What plates? It's not hard to shoot trough a flat sheet metal. But armor was hardened and domed.
@@Noise-Bomb For sure, bows are crazy powerful, way more powerful than most people would imagine.
Like the video says, they used the bigger crossbows to knock down stone walls.
I'm just saying that a set of proper metal armor will stop an arrow cold - that's why they wore it.
I'm not sure maybe it's different for crossbows but that repeating crossbow ( 3:15 ) wouldn't be semiautomatic it would be some sort of lever action or something describing the manual portion of the reload. With semiautomatic the forces used to expell the projectile is also used to re chamber the weapon.
I own several repeating crossbows and wile thay shoot fast next to a normal crossbow it's slow even compared to a lever or bolt action firearm but compared to real semiautomatic it might as well be a turtle on heroin.
Projectiles to project!
Missed something important, Simon: archery (including crossbows) were generally used as area weapons instead of point weapons. Crossbow precision is only possible at short ranges (20 to 60 meters, hitting a specific individual), so the 100-to-400-meter figure is for a number of crossbowmen polluting a piece of real estate with their massed bolt launches. English longbowmen also did that--launched a large number of arrows rapidly at long range into a piece of ground to inflict casualties. This technique of fire was carried over into the firearms age. The shoulder-to-shoulder Napoleonic-era musket tactics mimicked the crossbow formations of old. All the way up to the repeating rifle, infantrymen would form a firing line and shoot into a piece of ground at distances of a kilometer or more into a terrain feature. Shooting at point targets (individual enemy soldiers or putting bullets through a bunker slit) takes place at closer distances, often less than 100 meters.
As long as you're discussing ancient weaponry, may I put in a suggestion for the humble slingshot?
Joerg Sprave tends to agree with you too. 😉
slingshots are not ancient, slings are
I just bought a crossbow.
Keep it close. These are dangerous times.
Ask your local police department about the use against bullet proof vest...
Greater crossbow regulation? Useless, big sticks, rocks or even kicks can kill.
Omg the kid thinking he got away with it only to be flayed alive! I am glad I am alive today and not 500 years ago
I do so love a bow and arrows & crossbows..
and yet, mad Churchill marched into world war 2 with a bow and arrows... (and a set of bagpipes)...
They are also great for hunting With
A few years ago we ran some youth activities including Cross-bow firing at straw targets. We assumed the risk assessment levels were same as normal archery.
Was only afterwards when talking with a senior manager we found out the risk and insurance levels were much higher.
That's funny, about modern soldiers using crossbows... My call sign in OEF09 was crossbow.
No changes in crossbows since the intro of gunpowder? Come on man!
A crossbow is used a crazy man to shoot a neighbor. The government's answer is to regulate the crossbow. What way do you stop evil?
Question 1- Are you going to kill people?
Question 2- You promise not to kill people?
Question 3- Are you a criminal?
Register your crossbow.
Pay a fee and keep it in a case when not in use.
Remember what you promised. Cheerio!
Evil can't be legislated away.
Aaaand, of course, there's self-named "crossbow cannibal", Stephen Griffiths from Northern England. th-cam.com/video/XQUuIhTF24s/w-d-xo.html
There is some guy named Darryl who might have something to say...
My last name is Armbruster. This is just family history
Who did your translations?
That crossbow square reminds me a lot of later line tactics that were employed with firearms...
the line tactics probably drew a lot of inspiration from crossbows in all fairness.
Can you do the history of The Thunderbirds?
The airshow, not the TV show.
Their history is decades long, tragic, and they've entertained millions.
Thank you from the YF-23 guy, and Nellis AFB, home of The Thunderbirds!
Cross bows are cool but I think long bows with highly trained bowman would be much more effective. Because of much longer range and can shoot more arrows
It's all in the logistics. Also, the range is maybe slightly longer but not significantly. Plus, a crossbowman can shoot basically all day until he runs out of bolts. Actual archery on the other hand is a straight-up workout and a longbowman will be shooting for maybe an hour, before his efficiency goes way down due to exhaustion.
@@darthplagueis13 well what about the Comanche bow. Check out one of archery expert Lars Anderson's videos pretty cool not long range but cool all the same.
@@larchman4327 Well, the Comanche bow is a short bow, for one.
It should also be noted that it developed in a very different context to european crossbows and longbows, which were locked in an arms race with advancements in armour technology.
In other words: the effective range for crossbows and european longbows is shorter because you need to shoot an arrow or bolt at a relatively short range to have any chance of penetrating armour (and even then, late medieval plate armour was nigh impenetrable with actual kills mostly being the result of hits into the face when the visor of the helmet was up or just generally lucky shots/material failure with the armour).
In the americas, metal armour was not a major factor in warfare and thus an arrow could be considered effective at a far greater range.
It takes a long time to trained a skilled archer, its not so much an issue for crossbows.
450 metre range? Half a KM? Nah sorry.
Ah, the arms race! Will we ever stop trying to come up with better ways to kill each other?
And that's why gun control doesn't work!
@@slingshotwarrrior8105 Hi! Gun "bans" don't work - gun "control" does. Thanks for your comment.
no? we find better ways to do everything, why would we stop here? if you try to stop than you will be killed by someone who outpaces you in the arms race.
@@NORTH_CAROLINA_REAPER Not one group of people or another, friend - all humanity collectively. Gotta stop thinkin' "us or them", & try to focus on "we". Thanks for your reply.
@@cdfdesantis699 it has and always will be us or them. that's evolution and change.
Actually, crossbows do have a modern military application -- they're much quieter than a so-called silenced weapon. But they're also not as lethal, and they're just another large piece of kit to carry around...
You also have the benefit of not having to leave concealment for a quiet option, unlike an edge that makes it obvious that you are the wrong thing if not perfect.
@@Nipplator99999999999 you play too much call of duty
@@iambetterthanyouseriously9811 why would you assume CoD, it was just a option amongst many.
* goes off to play Civilization 6 *
Firearms aren't a honorable weapon either
I just wanted to point out that the crossbow was the first handheld weapon in which recoil became an issue so this predates firearms.
But unlike firearms, in a crossbow, counterintuitively, the recoil goes forward.
Simon: mentions Genoese Crossbowmen
Medieval 2 Players: get PTSD flashbacks
I won a crossbow in a tournament in Toussaint once.
Simon Whistler has to be some sort of British robot, idk how he hosts this many shows!
Drawing a warbow isn't something you *_have to_* have been training from childhood to manage. It requires long and regularly maintained training (skimp on it a while, and you loose it), but not decades of it …and you DON'T draw a warbow with your arms, but mainly with your back muscles. (hence why you draw a warbow with a completely different stance, compared to, say, modern sport archers) Try to draw it using your arms, and you will fail and/or hurt yourself.
Well, not decades but it's still several months of training until you can even draw a bow of that strength for several consecutive shots, and then even longer until you start actually hitting your target.
@@darthplagueis13 At least …though when it comes to accuracy, bows and crossbows take the same amount of time.
@@ZarlanTheGreen I'd say it depends. Crossbows have the advantage of letting you figure out the trajectory of the bolt depending on your aim more easily since you don't have to invest additional muscle once it's cocked whereas you can only keep a bow fully drawn for a few seconds.
@@darthplagueis13 Crossbows do give a bit of an advantage, in letting you keep it steady, but it's not like you keep a bow drawn for more than a brief moment. Any difference in training required for accuracy, isn't all that significant. (the benefits of the crossbow, is likely more pronounced in newbies, and quickly decrease into insignificance, as you train)
@@ZarlanTheGreen Not keeping a bow drawn kind of was my point. Once you've fully drawn the bow you don't have much time to adjust your aim all that much.
A crossbow on the other hand can be aimed like a rifle, though the exact ballistics are of course quite different
Lol love it
Also a good weapon for stealthing in zombie games. Guns bring The Horde.
I do some archery, I own 3 crossbows and a stone bow in addition to my bow. They are fun to hit targets with, like any weapon within reason, they’re as deadly as the person wielding it. I don’t hunt I have no need to harm any animal for pleasure, just to be clear.
The joy of hunting isn't in taking a animals life it's about becoming a part of the food chain, not just bringing home food but actually providing for your family, and knowing that you are part of one of the greatest conservative efforts in human history.
Humans my have started the problems in the first place but the fact is without hunting almost the entire world's ecosystems would collapse.
When I was a kid, my Dad bought a crossbow (I think motivated by some break-ins locally).
After getting it home, he fired it at the garage door for a test. The bolt went clean through the door, through the engine of the car inside, and lodged itself in the brick wall at the back.
Since then, I have always thought of crossbows as pretty serious things! Not to be messed about with!
I've got a 30lb roleplay Xbow and a 250lb real Xbow. I fired a pencil from the 30lb on and it went straight through a sofa (we use massive foam heads on the bolts for actually shooting at each other).
I've not dared fire the 250lb one at anything but a target with a few feet of wood behind it. Lost a few of the bolts due to their metal shaft deforming under the impact.
Yeah it didn't go through an engine
@@ExistentialBordem yeah it will, not through the main block but if it misses that and structural bits it can.
@@ExistentialBordem it did, although it probably missed the main block, as @Steven Lockey mentions.
@GEL yeah no it didn't. You've witnessed one shot from a crossbow as a kid and I hunt with them every summer. They're powerful yeah but bolts essentially explode if you hit anything harder than wood that's thicker than about a quarter.
Trying to ban crossbows after literally one attempted murder in 20 years is so UK
What's good for one is good for all.
Greater crossbow regulation, cause its not like people in the Uk don’t get murdered with everything from kitchen knives to pipes, to medium sized rocks. It’s the crossbows that are the problem, not the fact that people are willing to murder each other with common household objects.
In West Virginia, brothers and sisters...... never mind.
Whoever does your research should be fired
I literally just did a quick google search and saw that most modern crossbows can't effectively shoot powerfully or accurately at 100 yards... Let alone the ranges described in this video... Are you sure your statements are accurate?
Slingshots used by ancient armies would be an interesting topic.
I knew an old Gypsy who told me how he once saw a low flying Tornado Jet Fighter taken out by a crossbow. He didn't tell me the where, or the when, but he told me the 'how', and while I never knew the man to lie, I do believe him. Obviously, I can't verify he actually saw it. But the 'how' is certainly theoretically viable, and the same method has been used successfully on many paramilitary actions around the World against Helicopters.
Robert Jordan touched on the reintroduction of crossbows in his Wheel of Time series, with many of the reasons for their creation within that universe as in the real world, they were easier to train than bowmen for example.
New channel... Weaponography, or some other spin on one of the channels
Very cool I didn't realize how far back in time the first crossbow was used.
I can hear JoergSprave laugh
Holy crap these was a painful episode to watch. Weapons focused episodes were never this channels strong suit, but this was far more egregious than normal, just all manner of technical, historical and just plain factual inaccuracies laced throughout the entire script.
Eh. With how many videos he puts out through all of his channels it's no surprise some of the facts are iffy
I thought you were the vsauce guy
I've got a 80lb. pull, it can go through 2 car doors... silent kill.
In Canada we can build our own crossbows, eh
anybody can build their own crossbows in any country. of course authoritarian governments will make it illegal, but when patience runs out among us common folk....
Interesting side note, the crossbow equipped some of the early conquistadors in addition to having firearms. I'm pretty sure Cortez's force had crossbows in fact.
Yeah they had them during the siege of Tenochtitlan, they were much more powerful than the Aztec bow
Yeah, the whole “firearms immediately made the crossbow obsolete” argument is kinda wrong. Obviously they had greater firepower, and the noise alone was a great psychological weapon, but firearms at that point were still far from being able to match a crossbow’s accuracy and range
@@jordinagel1184 yep I'd prefer a crossbow over a smoothbore matchlock aswell
Crossbows have been used in modern conflicts, notably some of the eastern European conflicts, when the resistance fighters realised that a crossbow arrow will go through modern body armour and even sandbag defences that would stop a rifle round. And you can make your own arrows. And they are almost silent.
Not to mention the crossbow being a central piece in the swiss national origin story.