@@The_Rizz_God321 Goes to show he’s happy to be proven wrong and learn. Not everyone is able to make education guesses so they make experiments like this. That’s why we have the scientific theory
I mean... I remember it working pretty well in Mirai Nikki! MC takes down a terrorist that planted bombs in his school by throwing a dart at her eye. It's been a while since I've seen that anime, though.
@@veevee662 True, but they didn't work against plates at all, like even brigandine. But more to the point, the kinetic energy of an arrow would punch right through the plastic plate just as well as the mail. Only a low velocity, low energy missile like a pub dart is going to get a better reaction from the printed material.
No just slashed. Chain is great against slashing weapons but piercing weapons go through it like butter. That's why generally chain is mated with a gambeson to give that little bit more against piercing.
Not true. The padding underneath was quite light and did not contribute much to protection. Riveted chainmail, which was actually used at the time, could easily protect against arrows. This video shows butted chainmail, which is significantly weaker.
To be fair, you paired 3d printed scale mail against regular chain mail. Chain mail was designed to stop slashing weapons, and was essentially countered by arrows.
Arrows somewhat, crossbow bolts definitely. Bows were common when chainmail was used, but after crossbows were introduced, both chainmail and platemail saw reduced usage as bolts were able to penetrate both the chain and the padding under it
@@eemiltarnanen3319 and when plate armor was made the blunt weapones as maces and wathammers came to play to counter the plate armor, later guns came to counter any armor and most of weapones and almost nobody else used armor after, it became obsolete and then only weapones and clothes were used, only to add some light armor and helmets later to reduce the deaths in battle.
I was told they used hard leather to protect themselves from slashing weapons. When arrows started being used, they invented chain mail. And when bolts started being used, then they invented plate armour. That's what I've been told
That’s not even real chain mail, it’s a cheap knockoff of how they actually did it, there are several different kinds of chain mails and several different ways of attaching the chains together.
Nah, chainmail is actually very effective against that stuff, which it is thought to protect from: Arrows, daggers and Swords. You have to consider, that they wore special extra heavy clothing underneath against the impact and that they did also use shields.
@@Mypic-isnot-what-it-looks-like how you can compare a paper and a leather for writting test then say "oh paper is fukin better in all side than leather"? That sound stupid
3D appears to be inspired by Scale armour, which is why it did so well against projectiles. But this isn’t a fair comparison, Chainmail is built to protect from slashing of swords and axes
Real chainmail was meant mostly for slash resistant, but mixed with proper layers and padding, it was pretty affective. That 3d print is meant to be a form of 3d printed fabric. Not really armor. It would shatter under the stress of a fight unlike the chain.
depends what you printed it of, i guess. Nylon to duralumin could be stronger then steel in withstanding the stretching forces if applied in a ring form, but i dont know how the platelets of the "NASA" armor are dispersing force so idk which plactic would be best
Yeah, but now try it with a sharp sword in a slashing motion, like what chainmail was actually used for. Edit: How do I turn notifications off for 1 comment?
The plastic one is designed by nasa and is intended to be printed in steel. It would definitely survive Edit 2: this armour is used for anything that needs protecting, from astronauts to spacecraft, and possibly on tanks. its difficult to print composites strong enough. either way they are designed for different purposes. (you can print steel and that is what they use)
Sword nah... Much fun would be hatchet, morning star, bow. But as previous person commented. Design is made to be printed from other materials then PLA. Probably some mix of metals and fibers... Kevlar maybe?
Chainmail was designed to guard against arrows. Cheaper way to protect the archers and anyone else not (hopefully) in melee range while still retaining mobility. However it also functioned to connect between plate and scale mail. Areas less often slashed with a sword but might still be hit with smaller weapons...like arrows. Again, also to allow more mobility. So this video's test is accurate and your suggestion is uneducated.
@@skylineg6618 Mail isn't the best option to protect against arrows unless you had a sufficient amount of layers under it. It's application was more towards slashing and thrusting to an extent.
I think it's obvious but important to mention that chain mill is strong against slashes and maneuvering easier, but it's weak to stabs, thrusts and punches or anything that put alot of force into the thrust.
Part of the reason that Spears were so popular too. They stabbed through chain mail, and had reach over a sword. Most footmen had chain mail, few had plate. A spear was cheap, and still able to kill through general protection, and even strike through weak points in plate
@@zomgie6817 exactly, and maces were also starting to gain in popularity when plate armour took off as the maces could effortlessly break the plated armour!
Chainmail was made to protect against slashing, not stabbing, plus knighta usually wore padding underneath, so stabs (or darts, in this case) wouldn't do much.
@@Hopefull4you in a battle with metal armour all you'd hear was banging and clanging of metal and it would hurt your ears plus you'd be scared of the sound of clanging metal after enough fights so
This is why chainmail was usually paired with a layer of padded armor or plate. It had its uses, but it wasn't fool proof. Also, that is some thin chain mail too.
its probably decorative chain mail, for costumes etc. pretty much nobody manufactures proper chain mail anymore, since there is no practical use anymore... the average soldier actually had only padded coats as armor, as that is both cheap and decent at protecting you from slashing and piercing - while chain mail was very expensive and time consuming to make, a lot of work to maintain (easily rusted), and you still needed the padded coat to protect against piercing
@@synka5922 true, chain mail was used mainly in the early Middle Ages by knights, before the advent of plate armour, (though it was not fully phased out until long after plate entered the field)
@@SkullpunkArt chainmail was still used together with plate sometimes, especially at the joints. plate was mostly the answer to crossbows, as they punched through padded coats too easily. but not to get confused with gunpowder making plate armor unusable, in fact the first gunpowder soldiers in a fight were heavily armored cavalry. Armor just got better with time, thinner lighter etc.
@@synka5922 true, I’ve edited my comment to reflect this. Although it should be noted that plate armour was not fully phased out until long after gunpowder weapons entered the battlefield, however as they became more developed and effective, plate armour became thicker to compensate, sacrificing total coverage of the entire body for thicker coverage of more vital areas, eventually becoming the Cuirass. Fun fact, later medieval and renaissance armoursmiths tested their armour by shooting real bullets at it, to prove that they wouldn’t penetrate. This is where we get the term “bulletproof” from :3
I love that whenever the 3d printed loses (despite his efforts to make the most flawed test possible) he just says " comment who won" instead of admitting it sucked
The advantage of Chain Armor is in its resistance to withstand sword or ax slashes, while its weakness is that it is not resistant to long-range weapons such as arrows.
Not necessarily. It depends on the shape of the arrow head. In order to bust through chainmail, you need a Narrow, spike-like point that can get between the gaps of the ring to break through. This also aplies to things like swords, spears, even some axes that have top spikes. If you're using a flat and wide arrow head, it's not going to go through. You need the bodkins.
@@perp9894 Even heavy Bolts from 1 ton draw weight heavy crossbows won't knock you on your ass point blank. Most arrows and bolts have less kinetic energy than a .380 acp. The only way it's gonna knock you down is with pain, but assuming you're a foot soldier on a medieval battlefield, you're probably too high on adrenaline to feel much of anything until a bit later.
Slashes and cuts, also people started using blunt weapons because of plate, not because of chainmail since to counter mail all it takes is a nice stab.
Let alone you generally wore something underneath mail, like a gambeson, and the links were more dense to help protect against arrows unless it was the type meant to pierce armor, and people usually carried some form of shield. And who in the world would bring darts and throwing knives into a battlefield? Arrows were generally thicker than darts you throw at a cork board.
Chainmail is usually paired with padding underneath it due to the chainmail's certain flaws, but its still good on its own. The 3d printed armor was made by NASA of all people, so its expected to be durable. All in all, that chainmail the guy used was (stated by someone else) supposed to be used for costumes and what-not, so its less durable than the 3d printed one. When it comes to something like sword slashing, chainmail takes the cake though, but overall, the 3d printed one is far superior due to being strong on its own and not needing any padding. (I might be wrong on the "not needing any padding" part though, so don't take my word for it) And no, there wasn't any visible damage on the 3d printed one. At least, I don't see it, so please point it out
@@cyanalt2738 sorry, i dont mean to be this one guy, but you still need tk get past the steel armor. I personally would choose a blunt object like a maul
@@ItikGamemix bow and arrows aren't really good against going after infantry unless you got Hawkeyes skill and can hit em in the eye through the slits.
Thinking about this logically no sane army would use this in war unless it was made of metal they would probably be wearing regular body armor there fighting with guns not swords or in this case throwing darts
Thing is that chainmail is not designed for stabbing resistence. Its designed so you will resist from a cut. Edit: I have only now relized his mail is butted, he should use riveted mail.
U can't combine them, material of this items non combinative, for mail u need hard and metallic material, for printed u need flexible and synthetically resin materials.
What are you talking about? Of course it was meant to stop stabbing. Most Blades, even those meant for thrusting are significantly wider than a dart and won't typically get through mail very well. On top of that, mail was often worn over gambeson or as part of the joint protection on plate armor. Good luck stabbing through proper riveted mail and a gambeson. Sure, a blade can theoretically get through, but you'd need a particularly good thrust.
@@elainezhai7975youre missing the point completely. Hes comparing two different types of armor against two different materials. Its not a fair contest, because the NASA 3d printed armor is a scale plate and the ring mail is not scale plate - for accurate results, the ring mail should be scaled as well in order to prove equivalent protection standards. This is just biased towards 3d printed objects, trying to paint them as better when they're not yet
Also should mention that the NASA armor is also do-able in a metal 3D printer, so it would be incredibly strong depending on what material you're willing to spend on.
@@secret-fbi-man czyli w tym teście chodzi o porównanie odporności kombinezonów? Bo nie rozumiem...zbroja zrobiona z kółek zawsze będzie mniej odporna na drobiny mniejsze niż te kółka niż coś co zakrywa całą powierzchnię jeśli to ma być pancerz poszycia statku np. w sumie ten test jest do dupy choćby z tego względu że nie wiadomo co porównuje, odporność kombinezonu? Czy obecnie kombinezon astronauty ma w sobie zaszytą kolczugę i szukają lepszych rozwiązań?
@@twister8701 this was a test to see what armor was better. As for astronaut suits, those are mostly built with the purpose of insulation from UV radiation, hypothermia, and the vacuum of space. If something the size of a penny hits you at thousands of kilometers an hour, it doesn't matter if you have armor or not. If you were to have armor strong enough to withstand the impact, all of your organs would still be destroyed due to the sudden change in velocity
This is an extremely flawed test
Bro liked the comment😂
Yay for one thing the “real” chain meal was punch not riveted and the 3D was printed with plastic and not metal
@@2q2see2yummy yummy Chain Meals yummy yummy
100😮
@@The_Rizz_God321 Goes to show he’s happy to be proven wrong and learn. Not everyone is able to make education guesses so they make experiments like this. That’s why we have the scientific theory
“So what’s your weapon of choice?”
“🎯”
btd lore
I mean... I remember it working pretty well in Mirai Nikki! MC takes down a terrorist that planted bombs in his school by throwing a dart at her eye. It's been a while since I've seen that anime, though.
Actually, people did use darts in war! They were called plumbata, or sometimes roman war darts. They were thrown up into the air, like lawn darts.
A negroni
@@dancingenginier5707 a bunch of monkeys when colorful stray ballons fly near a road:
SIR WE ARE OUT OF ARMOR!
general:
Okay!
*takes out 3D printer*
General: Wait for about 1 hour
Soldier: bruh
@@grass4000THE ENEMIES ARE CLOSING IN
@@A340_PlaneSoldier: QUICKER PLEASE GENERAL
@@grass4000General: I'M TRYING!!
@@hanhtooaung9814 Soldier: AHHHHHHHHHHHH *dies*
Imagine fighting for WW3 and arriving in 3d printed armor 💀💀
it wont work since we have guns and jets and tanks and shit
@@crow247all useless you only need missiles
@@crow247Wow really 🤯🤯🤯
@@crow247 r/wooosh
Ain't too far fetched honestly
I'll be sure to wear my 3D printed chainmail to the next darts competition at my local bar.
I might have to steal this idea for the next dart throwing competition on Tuesday
I might get this idea but imma wear 3d printed mask
This chain armor isn't to protect from arrows, darts and that stuff.
Fr me too
Ha😂😂😂😂😂
i hate it when i’m in a medieval battle wearing nothing but chainmail and people start throwing darts at me
You gotta counter with NASA armour bro
Actually there were arrows with really thin tips, that worked like the darts in the video
@@veevee662 True, but they didn't work against plates at all, like even brigandine. But more to the point, the kinetic energy of an arrow would punch right through the plastic plate just as well as the mail. Only a low velocity, low energy missile like a pub dart is going to get a better reaction from the printed material.
he used darts to simulate arrows
Don't forget he's throwing inside so he's definitely not throwing hard otherwise the 3d printed armor would shattered
You aren't wearing a 3D printed armour at a war for sure😂
At a riot maybe yes
New Minecraft Armor : 3D Printed Armor
Bro used all the chainmail counters
fr
its like one of em unfair backpack ads
@@bubblegum7661 normal glass: 💥 🔨
Turbo flex glass: ✋
ah yes, using chainmail for its un-intended uses and wondering why it doesnt work
Fr
@@bubblegum7661 bro your killjoy video thumbnail 🤨
Remember, chainmails purpose wasn’t to stop you from getting hurt. It was to stop you from being slashed and deeply pierced by weapons
3D
@@ClarisseJordao-xb6fh NOT YOU
No just slashed.
Chain is great against slashing weapons but piercing weapons go through it like butter. That's why generally chain is mated with a gambeson to give that little bit more against piercing.
Which is why the mace was still used. It would break anything it hit. Not kill, but do enough to be useful
@@snakevenom4954 maces were more than capable of killing wym
Him next : 3D printed soldier vs real soldier , which one is better , let's find out
Let's find out by seeing who can hold their breath the longest☠️
“Alright guys this is our last attack to win the war, everyone got their darts and throwing knives?”
spears and arrows exist
@@extremistgarchomp4950 it was a joke
@@extremistgarchomp4950 no shit he was making a joke
😅
average British army
Most people wore padded armor underneath their chainmail so they'd have slashing and piercing protection
He is aware. The dude is just trying to make it as unfair as possible for the chainmail.
These are what one would call 'Biased Framing Devices'.
And in later periods, plate over both gambeson and mail
The padding was for the blunt force and pierce but youve got the right idea
Not true. The padding underneath was quite light and did not contribute much to protection. Riveted chainmail, which was actually used at the time, could easily protect against arrows. This video shows butted chainmail, which is significantly weaker.
"3d-printed wins"
"flawless victory"
A printed vest will not cope with a heroic sword strike
Now I can finally defend myself against a dart-wielding attacker
Bloons tower defense
bro is a MOAB 💀
dont let me catch you in monkey meadow
btd Balloon armor
Btd boi
To be fair, you paired 3d printed scale mail against regular chain mail. Chain mail was designed to stop slashing weapons, and was essentially countered by arrows.
Arrows somewhat, crossbow bolts definitely. Bows were common when chainmail was used, but after crossbows were introduced, both chainmail and platemail saw reduced usage as bolts were able to penetrate both the chain and the padding under it
Thanks god someone else knows it
@@eemiltarnanen3319 and when plate armor was made the blunt weapones as maces and wathammers came to play to counter the plate armor, later guns came to counter any armor and most of weapones and almost nobody else used armor after, it became obsolete and then only weapones and clothes were used, only to add some light armor and helmets later to reduce the deaths in battle.
I was told they used hard leather to protect themselves from slashing weapons. When arrows started being used, they invented chain mail. And when bolts started being used, then they invented plate armour. That's what I've been told
That’s not even real chain mail, it’s a cheap knockoff of how they actually did it, there are several different kinds of chain mails and several different ways of attaching the chains together.
next: 3d printed housewife vs real housewife
3-D printed because with the darts it went straight through the chain mail armor but with 3-D printed it bounced off
if you're attacking someone by throwing darts at them I'm pretty sure you can just use basically anything against it lmao.
If someone attacking you with throwing darts just walk back like 5 steps and see what they do about it
Nah, chainmail is actually very effective against that stuff, which it is thought to protect from: Arrows, daggers and Swords.
You have to consider, that they wore special extra heavy clothing underneath against the impact and that they did also use shields.
he should try slappin the armor with his coc an balls
It's bloons in this bitch
i would assume its to simulate a random stab, but then again why not just actually stab it yknow
Using chainmail to stop d'art is like using frypans to fly.
💀
Bro's got that french autocorrect💀💀💀🤖🤖🤖☠️☠️
@@cani-stay-withyou3406 Oui
@@rareshogas8683 😂
@@rareshogas8683 it’s because chainmail was to stop blades from piercing your skin. Not for anything else necessarily.
(Yes, you can nerd emoji me.)
Put armor from a 3D printer under real armor: 🗿
Imagine being in a medieval war and they give you throwing darts😂
“Okay so what armor would you want to wear?”
- A 3d printed one.
As an old medieval warrior- I can confirm I have skin made of styrofoam. That’s actually my cousin Jim in the video volunteering as a test dummy.
Max comments
Why did this make me laugh so hard bro. “Cousin Jim” 💀💀💀
Halt thou blasphemy, no true medieval warrior would use such foul language. Doeth thou not have shame?
1k likew
1.5k likes
Chainmail is use to prevent slicing
Real maille is incredibly tough to punch through as well.
true!
So can the third 1 so whats youre point
@@Mypic-isnot-what-it-looks-like that it’s not a fair test since mail was never made for that
@@Mypic-isnot-what-it-looks-like how you can compare a paper and a leather for writting test then say "oh paper is fukin better in all side than leather"? That sound stupid
Captain ,they have 3d printed armour and it is so durable General: TAKE THE FLAMETHROWER 🔥🔥
"3D printed house vs real house"
"3D printed house wins"
3D appears to be inspired by Scale armour, which is why it did so well against projectiles. But this isn’t a fair comparison, Chainmail is built to protect from slashing of swords and axes
Scale armor? It's terrible
@@spacedout4061 wax😊 a
Chainmail is useless
The 3d printed one is meant to be printed in metal by NASA so I'd say it still wins
@@steakeater4557Why is it useless. Chainmail ammor is thin and light which good for mobility while is good against a slash.
Real chainmail was meant mostly for slash resistant, but mixed with proper layers and padding, it was pretty affective.
That 3d print is meant to be a form of 3d printed fabric. Not really armor. It would shatter under the stress of a fight unlike the chain.
depends what you printed it of, i guess. Nylon to duralumin could be stronger then steel in withstanding the stretching forces if applied in a ring form, but i dont know how the platelets of the "NASA" armor are dispersing force so idk which plactic would be best
well nowdays you can print with metal tho
Slash and cut resistant*
"Hexagons are the bestagons." - CGP Grey 🐝
Yeah, but now try it with a sharp sword in a slashing motion, like what chainmail was actually used for.
Edit: How do I turn notifications off for 1 comment?
The plastic one is designed by nasa and is intended to be printed in steel. It would definitely survive
Edit 2: this armour is used for anything that needs protecting, from astronauts to spacecraft, and possibly on tanks. its difficult to print composites strong enough. either way they are designed for different purposes. (you can print steel and that is what they use)
Sword nah... Much fun would be hatchet, morning star, bow. But as previous person commented. Design is made to be printed from other materials then PLA. Probably some mix of metals and fibers... Kevlar maybe?
Chainmail was designed to guard against arrows. Cheaper way to protect the archers and anyone else not (hopefully) in melee range while still retaining mobility. However it also functioned to connect between plate and scale mail. Areas less often slashed with a sword but might still be hit with smaller weapons...like arrows. Again, also to allow more mobility. So this video's test is accurate and your suggestion is uneducated.
@@skylineg6618 Mail isn't the best option to protect against arrows unless you had a sufficient amount of layers under it. It's application was more towards slashing and thrusting to an extent.
I think it's obvious but important to mention that chain mill is strong against slashes and maneuvering easier, but it's weak to stabs, thrusts and punches or anything that put alot of force into the thrust.
Chainmail wasn’t made for stabbing, it was made so if you get slashed by a sword, your skin would stay protected underneath
y, chain mail is not for this darts etc staff
Any pointed object is capable of going through, though they pale in comparison to the most brutal weapon for the time... Clubs!
Part of the reason that Spears were so popular too.
They stabbed through chain mail, and had reach over a sword. Most footmen had chain mail, few had plate. A spear was cheap, and still able to kill through general protection, and even strike through weak points in plate
Exactly! FINALLY SOMEONE!
@@zomgie6817 exactly, and maces were also starting to gain in popularity when plate armour took off as the maces could effortlessly break the plated armour!
Chainmail was made to protect against slashing, not stabbing, plus knighta usually wore padding underneath, so stabs (or darts, in this case) wouldn't do much.
This honeycomb technology is actually used by NASA
The styrofoam was the strongest
Why has no one thought of styrofoam armor yet?
ong
@@LegoAnimalCrossing Askin the real questions here 😂
@@LegoAnimalCrossing If I was in battle and I had to wear styrofoam armor, I'd just sacrifice myself because the noise of the armor would kill me
@@Hopefull4you in a battle with metal armour all you'd hear was banging and clanging of metal and it would hurt your ears plus you'd be scared of the sound of clanging metal after enough fights so
bro literally tested chainmail against piercing weapons and expected it to work
Its real armor it is weaird though i know
@@hauknord5025 Chainmail armour is against slashing, not piercing
@@hauknord5025 it’s only good for a attack that is a slash not pointing
@@hauknord5025Yeah, real armor that is effective against slashing weapons, which means testing it with piercing weapons put it at a disadvantage.
@@shady4926 I know right
bro is ready for the apocalypse💀
"3d printed human being vs real human being"
"Who wins?"
This is why chainmail was usually paired with a layer of padded armor or plate. It had its uses, but it wasn't fool proof. Also, that is some thin chain mail too.
It’s not even properly made, real chainmail is riveted, and certain rings are left solid to increase strength.
its probably decorative chain mail, for costumes etc.
pretty much nobody manufactures proper chain mail anymore, since there is no practical use anymore...
the average soldier actually had only padded coats as armor, as that is both cheap and decent at protecting you from slashing and piercing - while chain mail was very expensive and time consuming to make, a lot of work to maintain (easily rusted), and you still needed the padded coat to protect against piercing
@@synka5922 true, chain mail was used mainly in the early Middle Ages by knights, before the advent of plate armour, (though it was not fully phased out until long after plate entered the field)
@@SkullpunkArt chainmail was still used together with plate sometimes, especially at the joints. plate was mostly the answer to crossbows, as they punched through padded coats too easily.
but not to get confused with gunpowder making plate armor unusable, in fact the first gunpowder soldiers in a fight were heavily armored cavalry. Armor just got better with time, thinner lighter etc.
@@synka5922 true, I’ve edited my comment to reflect this. Although it should be noted that plate armour was not fully phased out until long after gunpowder weapons entered the battlefield, however as they became more developed and effective, plate armour became thicker to compensate, sacrificing total coverage of the entire body for thicker coverage of more vital areas, eventually becoming the Cuirass.
Fun fact, later medieval and renaissance armoursmiths tested their armour by shooting real bullets at it, to prove that they wouldn’t penetrate. This is where we get the term “bulletproof” from :3
Ah yes. What a fair fight. Chain mail vs scale mail
Very fair indeed
Just wait for snail mail…
He use darts too like what??? Chain mail was for slashing attacks not stabbing
@@ArthurMorgan8910finally someone sane in the entire comment section
Ye
3d printed wins till u get jumped by a guy with a sword
Me: Can I make a Glock-17 fully able to do everything BUT 3d Printed
Amazon: Just buy one off of our store.
I love that whenever the 3d printed loses (despite his efforts to make the most flawed test possible) he just says " comment who won" instead of admitting it sucked
I love how the 3d printed armour is always fdm printed pla or petg and it still wins. Irl its mostly dmp balistic titanium 😂.
It didn't loose tho, did it?
You mean the non-printed?
When 3D printed loses he says “Real Wins” watch the other vids
But the 3D printed didn't lose. It literally blocked every weapon. the darts went right through that chain mail.
Reminder that Chainmail only helps against slicing and cutting, not blunt force.
So kinda like how a bullet proof vest protects you from having metal stuck in you, but not the impact of the bullet.
@@dominicballinger6536 yeah kinda
@@dominicballinger6536 more like how veblar vests can stop a bullet but not a knife.
Plate mail too. Actually makes blunt weapons MORE dangerous.
Yeah, thatMs why it’s typically worn of gambeson or other padded clothing
the next video is probably 3D printed Glock vs real Glock💀
It's all funs and games until the enemy brings in a flamethrower
The advantage of Chain Armor is in its resistance to withstand sword or ax slashes, while its weakness is that it is not resistant to long-range weapons such as arrows.
Not necessarily.
It depends on the shape of the arrow head.
In order to bust through chainmail, you need a Narrow, spike-like point that can get between the gaps of the ring to break through. This also aplies to things like swords, spears, even some axes that have top spikes.
If you're using a flat and wide arrow head, it's not going to go through. You need the bodkins.
Well it is one of the reason why chain mail was mostly put in places that steel armor doesnt cover
@@mask8402 trust me, a big arrow, while it wont go through, it will put you right on the floor
Thats why shield exists
@@perp9894
Even heavy Bolts from 1 ton draw weight heavy crossbows won't knock you on your ass point blank. Most arrows and bolts have less kinetic energy than a .380 acp.
The only way it's gonna knock you down is with pain, but assuming you're a foot soldier on a medieval battlefield, you're probably too high on adrenaline to feel much of anything until a bit later.
"Wait let me print my armor"💀
How’s that any more absurd than “wait let me forge my amour” lol
@jayyoudeeee9096 who shows up to a battle with a hammer and anvil to make armor? Wouldn't it be pre-made prior to the fight?
@@JaceCruz-ux7ic that’s exactly my point
@@JaceCruz-ux7icWho shows up to a battle with a 3D Printer to make armor?
@@SenseiblueTheCatboyhuh wdym
I am more surprised by the fact that he can throw a knife
pov: 3d printed nuke vs real nuke
Now use a battle axe against both.
💀
Chainmail was designed to stop slashes, not piercing. This is also why people started using blunt weapons
Slashes and cuts, also people started using blunt weapons because of plate, not because of chainmail since to counter mail all it takes is a nice stab.
If real wins he tell real wins ,but when 3d printed wins he tell we tell which wins😂
Real didn't win because the arrow went through it
But the 3d printed one reflected it
3d printed ak-47 vs real ak-47💀
You mention the one gun you can’t print a lower to
3d printed wins
Bringing this to school today I have two chances to try😊
Haaaaaaa
3D printed earth vs real earth
Who’s gonna tell this guy that chainmail only protects you from slashing 😂
Look at the 2 comments above you.
Yeah, as the guy said, maybe check the comments where the dude literally liked a comment that said this..
Seven months ago
Lmao stolen comment
don't you dare, we are about to see some real shit
Chainmail was actually made to not only protect from arrows and other ammo but also reduce the cut
3D printed chips vs real chips 💀
If I had to go to war I wouldn’t wanna wear 3D printed plastic.
dawg that's exactly what chainmail was NOT designed to stop
it depends. now you need a durability test.
@cynthiabernardo1764 😂😂
@Cynthia Bernardo 👍
600th like
@Cynthia Bernardo i need trubo flex CONDO-
@@dipeshgrg2877 🤨 ayo
Chain mail is actually worn the other side like with a 90 degree turn it protects way better like that.
Wow I'll wear my plastic armor next time I go into battle I guess
Plot twist: best armor = chain mail layered on top of 3d printed
You got Iron man levels of GENIUS
With a layer of styrofoam on top
That's actually what gambeson was used for
This chain armor isn't to protect from arrows, darts and that stuff.
I don't know... layered plastic printed stuff would do much in real situation 😅
One hit from a sword and that 3D printed one's gonna shatter.
Let alone you generally wore something underneath mail, like a gambeson, and the links were more dense to help protect against arrows unless it was the type meant to pierce armor, and people usually carried some form of shield. And who in the world would bring darts and throwing knives into a battlefield? Arrows were generally thicker than darts you throw at a cork board.
Now try it with a real sword an lets see if the printed armor works
3D printed one because it has more protection over the body
"3d printed Michael Pick vs Real Michael Pick"
"3d printed wins"💀💀
You can literally see the damage the 3D printed armor took. The chain mail will be a lot more durable.
You're right about chain mail being better but your reasoning for thinking so is cap. You just wanna seem important by disproving the video.
@@RIP_Rxnin why is that?
Chainmail is usually paired with padding underneath it due to the chainmail's certain flaws, but its still good on its own. The 3d printed armor was made by NASA of all people, so its expected to be durable. All in all, that chainmail the guy used was (stated by someone else) supposed to be used for costumes and what-not, so its less durable than the 3d printed one.
When it comes to something like sword slashing, chainmail takes the cake though, but overall, the 3d printed one is far superior due to being strong on its own and not needing any padding. (I might be wrong on the "not needing any padding" part though, so don't take my word for it)
And no, there wasn't any visible damage on the 3d printed one. At least, I don't see it, so please point it out
@@RIP_Rxnin homie isn't wrong on top of the fact that this "chainmail" isn't even close to real chainmail
If you are using plastic sure, but NASA would clearly assume a much stronger material being used
Both are ok, chainmail is used to counter cut, but the 3d printed is lighter (and also weaker) but that's fine for fun
Lesson learned, Darts are the ultimate medieval and modern weapon. This one getting us through the 9th crusade bois!!@1!11@1
@@cyanalt2738 sorry, i dont mean to be this one guy, but you still need tk get past the steel armor. I personally would choose a blunt object like a maul
Bow and arrow: 👁👄👁
@@ItikGamemix bow and arrows aren't really good against going after infantry unless you got Hawkeyes skill and can hit em in the eye through the slits.
@@justyouraverageguy8404 try to understand a joke challenge level: impossible
He was kidding lol. Obviously darts wont get you through a crusade
The vikings would have been grateful if they had this 3d printing technology then 😂
Higher in defense but lower in durability
They both are equally good in my opinion
Also use scale mail for a fair comparison
Agreed then it’s closer to a tie
The 3D print was scalemail.
@@kingcole7927 But he did NOT use scalemail to compare the scalemail too.
@@MadRaptorGaming that’s the point. This is apples and oranges
“Parry this you filthy casual” *pulls out 1911*
NAH
When he said comment who won I said “glock 40” in my head.😂
Wait he has 1911 in his pocket? Personally I only have 1853
@@PomegranateJuiceSmoothie I personally would be have a desser
pull out a Maxim Gun, you decide from where
Chainmail is used for close combat or for sword swings. Not projectiles
POV:3D printed:nah bro youre not touching me.
We can survive WW3 with these plastic armor
51 likes and no replies let me fix that
3D
When guns are blazing I'm not too sure your statement will be correct
Nor chainmail or 3d printed Armour can save you from bullets
No it’s WW4
Imagine seeing another army wearing 3D printed armor in WW3 💀💀
That would be cool
lmao, but the grenade asys its funny
Thinking about this logically no sane army would use this in war unless it was made of metal they would probably be wearing regular body armor there fighting with guns not swords or in this case throwing darts
bro got a whole story for my commenht@@evancollums8207
@@evancollums8207 metal 3d printing is a think, and you could make armour plates with it
world war 4 be like:
just 3d printed armor 💀💀💀
Use both and you’ll be ok 😂
Thing is that chainmail is not designed for stabbing resistence. Its designed so you will resist from a cut.
Edit: I have only now relized his mail is butted, he should use riveted mail.
well actually it is if it wasn't for stabbing resistance the rings would be made much bigger the reason there small is less deep stabs
@@tannersrdr2clips432 d
It would probably be really good if you combined the design, that way it could resist both
@@entomologistmaximus5097 That's called scale armor
@@entomologistmaximus5097 wym by that lol
3d printed may not be able to do well against a sword slash, but what if you combine the two? Perfect protection.
How tf do you expect to combine them? Chocolate swirl?
@@mushroomy9899 💀
U can't combine them, material of this items non combinative, for mail u need hard and metallic material, for printed u need flexible and synthetically resin materials.
@@adeptus5030 I mean you put one on top of the ofher
@@mushroomy9899 put on on top of the other?
3d armor is perfect for alien invasions.
"3d printed World War 2 Vs Real World War 2. Which one is better? Lets blast it out."
"What do you mean we cant go into battle yet?"
"We cant go! The 3d printer isnt done yet"
"AYO WE NEED MORE TANKS"
"Okay back up because shit will start to get real
crap the 3d printer can't print enough tanks
3d Print the snipers!
3d print a army of 1 million tanks, bombers, and nukes
Or just ask nilegreen for his nuke
Try hitting em both with an axe;-;
Lol
Or morningstar mace
@@user-nh9ej2nt8d morning stars maces op pls nerf lol
@@bigenemy000 sorry, don't get your lexis. English is not my native.
3D printed nuke vs real nuke 💀💀💀
but that piece of plastic ain’t gonna stop a bullet
Chainmail was never meant to stop stabbing, it's also easily repairable.
So is the 3D printed one
What are you talking about? Of course it was meant to stop stabbing. Most Blades, even those meant for thrusting are significantly wider than a dart and won't typically get through mail very well. On top of that, mail was often worn over gambeson or as part of the joint protection on plate armor. Good luck stabbing through proper riveted mail and a gambeson. Sure, a blade can theoretically get through, but you'd need a particularly good thrust.
@@lordcastellan4735no one talked about anything lol
mate it's literally made for stabbing are you high? there are european police that uses chain mail in response to knife wielding threats
@@Ai-kk9ug you're right
Never let them know your next move - Brings a flamethrower
why did this tickle me so?
What's a flamethrower
@@bobbytucker6494 are you serious?...
@@bobbytucker6494 someone who throws flames
👍🏾
Then just enchant it with Fire Protection
If they made metal version of 3d printed armor would be better
3d printed because it looks like the dart is going in between the meta on the real armor but the 3d just makes it bounce off
*proceeds to use butted mail against piercing attacks and compares it to scale mail*
Agree
ummm i think 3d printed won
@@elainezhai7975youre missing the point completely.
Hes comparing two different types of armor against two different materials. Its not a fair contest, because the NASA 3d printed armor is a scale plate and the ring mail is not scale plate - for accurate results, the ring mail should be scaled as well in order to prove equivalent protection standards.
This is just biased towards 3d printed objects, trying to paint them as better when they're not yet
“And that’s how 3D printers started going to war.”
Lol
@@alexvankleeck1491 The story of how the world war 3 started because of 3D printers who printed a whole hard tanks and unstoppable
@@bandiechannel4847 dude I will be the Americans
Man got 696 likes
I am gonna make it 697
Team 3d printed
👇🏼
Here
One crucial detail, chainmail was uaed back in medieval times and back then, they used long swords and it would be way easier to slash
Also should mention that the NASA armor is also do-able in a metal 3D printer, so it would be incredibly strong depending on what material you're willing to spend on.
Tylko ile taka zbroja z metalu by ważyła? 🤣
A carbon based polymer would be the most likely choice
@@twister8701 weight is not a factor in space
@@secret-fbi-man czyli w tym teście chodzi o porównanie odporności kombinezonów? Bo nie rozumiem...zbroja zrobiona z kółek zawsze będzie mniej odporna na drobiny mniejsze niż te kółka niż coś co zakrywa całą powierzchnię jeśli to ma być pancerz poszycia statku np. w sumie ten test jest do dupy choćby z tego względu że nie wiadomo co porównuje, odporność kombinezonu? Czy obecnie kombinezon astronauty ma w sobie zaszytą kolczugę i szukają lepszych rozwiązań?
@@twister8701 this was a test to see what armor was better. As for astronaut suits, those are mostly built with the purpose of insulation from UV radiation, hypothermia, and the vacuum of space. If something the size of a penny hits you at thousands of kilometers an hour, it doesn't matter if you have armor or not. If you were to have armor strong enough to withstand the impact, all of your organs would still be destroyed due to the sudden change in velocity
I'm not wearing a 3D printed armor and going for a battle 💀💀
Fr one Blunt Attack and its over
gonna be the odd one out
It’s the best choice tho
wear a kevlar version for gun fights and iron for sword or bow fights
@@NomadinTomfoolerysame
3D printed Submarine Missile vs Real Submarine Missile💀
fun fact-chainmail is to protect you from slashes not stabs