Crossbow vs. Chainmail - The International Chainmail Competition

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  • čas přidán 19. 12. 2022
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 130

  • @martshearer498
    @martshearer498 Před rokem +17

    The importance of shooting a connected garment, rather than an isolated patch, is an important detail, often ignored.

    • @Ironskin
      @Ironskin  Před rokem +3

      You're right. I think the dummy and it's mounting also plays a huge role whether we see bolts fly through the air or get stuck. This test certainly wasn't resembling history close enough in all the details to say "And that's how it was in the middle ages". Yet it helps to become aware of the variety of such factors.

  • @Eddi1392
    @Eddi1392 Před rokem +27

    Thank you for the opportunity to take part in this competition and this awesome video, Sebastian :)

  • @Lokarsh21
    @Lokarsh21 Před rokem +84

    Finally some fair test against ranged weapons, and it is no surprise that the results are mostly positive! For those that still held doubts: mail armor works, even at relatively short range, bolts bounce off! The competition was truly fun to watch... one might say "riveting" 😂

    • @landsknecht8654
      @landsknecht8654 Před rokem +1

      Yes!!!

    • @landsknecht8654
      @landsknecht8654 Před rokem +9

      I've been doing some on and off research about mail armor also known as "chain-mail", and turns out to be mail armor is a lot better than what people think. From the information I've gathered it looks like in my personal opinion better than scale & lamellar in terms of overall use of mail mostly on the maintenance part. The only thing that scale and lamellar armor has over chain-mail is it's better against blunt force, other than that mail armor is superior in a lot of ways in my opinion especially when it comes to maintenance & repairs.
      According to historical sources from both sides mail armor with gamberson did pretty darn good against arrows even against powerful bows. In fact according to the sources mail with gamberson seemed to be about almost equal to lamellar armor against missiles more or less.
      "...drawn up in front of the cavalry, stood firm as a wall, and every foot-soldier wore a vest of thick felt and a coat of mail so dense and strong that our arrows made no impression on them... I saw some with from one to ten arrows sticking in them, and still advancing at their ordinary pace without leaving the ranks" - Bahā'al-Dīn, year 1174
      Also
      "...and whilst the Turks were fleeing before him, they (who shoot as well backwards as forwards) would cover him with darts. When he had driven them out of the village, he would pick out the darts that were sticking all over him; and put on his coat-of-arms again... Then, turning round, and seeing that the Turks had come in at the other end of the street, he would charge them again, sword in hand, and drive them out. And this he did about three times in the manner I have described." -Joinville
      It's no wonder why it was used a lot for so long by the Romans and medieval Europeans.

    • @tonymartin9142
      @tonymartin9142 Před rokem

      actually piercing weapons are the most effective weapons against chainmail and could still cause damage to someone even if it doesn't pierce the chainmail

    • @molochi
      @molochi Před rokem

      Finally? I seen a lot of good tests.

    • @user-ei4uy4hj5b
      @user-ei4uy4hj5b Před 10 měsíci

      The mail has no give unlike someone wearing it

  • @AmarothEng
    @AmarothEng Před rokem +23

    Damn, those Christian's rings fared incredibly in the stretch test. That's impressive. Btw, in those tests, I'd try piercing the mail with a sharp point, say of a rondel dagger. You could build a contraption measuring the weight which needs to be put in in order to bust a ring open. Also, testing with several crossbows of different weight could give us more of a variety of results, instead of "all got 0, one got 2".

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 Před rokem +7

      Yeah a strong point like a rondel dagger stabbing through the sample into a standardized test media would give you a much better idea of how well they resist penetration especially if you go with the peak force needed to reach a specific depth through slow penetration.

  • @peasantmob1712
    @peasantmob1712 Před rokem +16

    This test was conducted with a 220 kg crossbow with a 45 gram quarrel made by Andreas Bichler. The same crossbowmaker's 210 kg crossbow shooting a 57.7 gram quarrel shot at 93.8 joules (his video in "Medieval Composite Crossbow vs Body Armour Ballistic Vest"), so the crossbow in this video would have shot at similar joules.
    You can cross compare this with Todd Todeschini's test in which a longbowman shot at mail at 130 joules.
    Or The Way of Archery test in which lamellar armor was shot at 140 joules.

    • @molochi
      @molochi Před rokem +4

      Thanks for this. They really glossed over the crossbow side of the test. It looked like they may have used at least 2 different style boltheads as well as the one shown at 1:33 isn't the same as the one shown pointing at penetrations later.

  • @landsknecht8654
    @landsknecht8654 Před rokem +54

    Mail armor is a lot stronger then people think. The stuff is amazing.

    • @majungasaurusaaaa
      @majungasaurusaaaa Před rokem +5

      People wouldn't have bothered with the cost, the weight and the long production time if all it did was stop cuts. Proper maille was always high end armor. There are far cheaper and faster to make options out there if all one wants to do is stop a cutting blade.

    • @Dan-gs3kg
      @Dan-gs3kg Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yeah, with the water mill hammers you could make a massive amount of unfitted helmets and breast plates.

    • @drakesomerset129
      @drakesomerset129 Před 5 měsíci

      @@majungasaurusaaaawhere are you getting these “facts”?

  • @jamesj4827
    @jamesj4827 Před 10 měsíci +5

    But Ironskin, this can't be right, we all know mail can be pierced by a stiff poke with a finger. XD

  • @Mertranor
    @Mertranor Před rokem +8

    Such many beautiful patterns to see, and great test to understand the quality of this type of armour. I hope you could make the second version soon, so this time the maille can arrive to your hands in time. Kinds regards my friend, and congratulations for your innitiative in this great event. ❤

  • @mchernett
    @mchernett Před rokem +5

    This is great. Looking forward to seeing this!

  • @NL-Chaos
    @NL-Chaos Před rokem +2

    I have no clue why your channel has not more subscribers, your content is good and your informative but not boring to listen to. I subbed to you to see what awesome content you will be making in the future.

  • @patrykpllp
    @patrykpllp Před rokem +7

    Very relaxing video. Nice to see so many different patterns of mail put under tests

  • @landsknecht8654
    @landsknecht8654 Před rokem +8

    I've been doing some on and off research about mail armor also known as "chain-mail", and turns out to be mail armor is a lot better than what people think.
    According to historical sources from both sides mail armor with gamberson did pretty darn good against arrows even against powerful bows. In fact according to the sources mail with gamberson seemed to be about almost equal to lamellar armor against missiles more or less.
    "...drawn up in front of the cavalry, stood firm as a wall, and every foot-soldier wore a vest of thick felt and a coat of mail so dense and strong that our arrows made no impression on them... I saw some with from one to ten arrows sticking in them, and still advancing at their ordinary pace without leaving the ranks" - Bahā'al-Dīn, year 1174
    Also
    "...and whilst the Turks were fleeing before him, they (who shoot as well backwards as forwards) would cover him with darts. When he had driven them out of the village, he would pick out the darts that were sticking all over him; and put on his coat-of-arms again... Then, turning round, and seeing that the Turks had come in at the other end of the street, he would charge them again, sword in hand, and drive them out. And this he did about three times in the manner I have described." -Joinville
    It's no wonder why it was used a lot for so long by the Romans and medieval Europeans.

    • @mustafaoncu1980
      @mustafaoncu1980 Před 11 měsíci

      Haçlı saldırında 1101 seferi münasebetiyle görmekteyiz. Bu sefer Haçlı Seferleri Tarihinde Haçlıların neredeyse üç büyük ordusunun tamamen yok edilmesi nedeniyle olsa gerek sıralama da pek sayılmaz. İşte bu savaşlardan birinde 5 Eylül’de Haçlılar, Ereğli Irmağı’nın yer aldığı Akgöl Ovası’na vardıklarında susamış halde ırmağa koşmuşlardı. Bu sırada Türkler yine benzer bir taktik ile pusuda beklemekteydiler. Suyun karşı yakasında pusuda konuşlanan Türkler aniden ortaya çıkarak Haçlıları mutat olduğu üzere ok yağmuruna tuttular. I. Kılıç Arslan, Danişmendli Gümüştekin, Harran Emirî Karaca ve diğer Türk beylerinin idaresindeki atlı birlikler Haçlıları çembere aldı. Kaçışmaya çalışan Haçlılar Türk okçuları tarafından öldürülürken harp meydanında yer alanlar da kılıçtan geçirildi.

    • @cool06alt
      @cool06alt Před 6 měsíci +1

      This argument being overused so long that someone didn't pay attention to average composite bows being used on horseback. It's just 70lb in draw weight. At that level, lamellar could do just fine while being much cheaper option.
      In truth people began to cover their mail with brigandine or lamellar once they are known/available.
      And also not all maille were same, some of these maille that you cited as state of the art are too expensive to be made and equipping whole army.

  • @steyn1775
    @steyn1775 Před rokem +1

    Couldn't wait for this video!

  • @MinSredMash
    @MinSredMash Před rokem +5

    Surely points should have been given for bolts that bounced off, even though rings were broken! The maille still would have prevented serious injury!

    • @lscibor
      @lscibor Před rokem

      Yes, hard to be sure from the video, but it seems only one sample of mail got penetrated in any significant way. Rest not at all. We don't know the energy of the bolts. But judging from other Andreas Bichler's works, I imagine that this 45g bolt from 485 pounds crossbow should be at least about 70J.

    • @marcofaccio9207
      @marcofaccio9207 Před rokem

      There is a quite difference between smaller rings patches and bigger rings ones… of course more tight is the mesh better it can resist to tip penetration

  • @jhonnyw600
    @jhonnyw600 Před rokem +3

    Nice video, very professional. The samples were all so beautiful! Shout out to Mike Cervantes from the US!

  • @marcofaccio9207
    @marcofaccio9207 Před rokem +4

    Now that i know everything, i’m ready for the next one! 😉😉😅

  • @alexanderusenko283
    @alexanderusenko283 Před rokem +1

    Excelent work

  • @tarvelsforge
    @tarvelsforge Před rokem +1

    Amazing as always my dear friend!!! Great work

    • @Ironskin
      @Ironskin  Před rokem +1

      I'm glad you like it. Too bad you didn't find the time for making a patch. I would have liked to have you on board.

    • @tarvelsforge
      @tarvelsforge Před rokem

      @@Ironskin indeed, as would I! Perhaps another time when I’m not as swamped with work 😂

  • @marcelorezende5788
    @marcelorezende5788 Před rokem

    Nice video, never stop plsss.

  • @sergeyleopard8872
    @sergeyleopard8872 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Hallo Sebastian! Ich habe zufällig deinen Kanal gefunden. Es ist immer schön, diejenigen in Deutschland zu sehen, die die Geschichte ihrer Vorfahren rekonstruieren, denn sie sind es wert. Viel Glück und mehr Abonnenten. Mit freundlichen Grüßen vom Russlanddeutschen aus Moskau.✊🤝

  • @SuperDydx
    @SuperDydx Před rokem +1

    Thanks for this. I was going to enter, but family matters forced me not to. I see now I would have come pretty much last. Great video and thanks again!

  • @RobertJohnson-sd9tw
    @RobertJohnson-sd9tw Před rokem +1

    Robert here. Thank you. I enjoyed participating in the competition and hope to participate should you have any competitions in the future. It was a great learning experience for me.

    • @Ironskin
      @Ironskin  Před rokem

      Hi Robert! I'm grateful to have had you on board! :)

  • @scottmaddox3471
    @scottmaddox3471 Před rokem +2

    Thanks for the great testing! It's neat to see the different failure modes. How useful and difficult would it be to measure penetration depth for the crossbow test?

    • @Ironskin
      @Ironskin  Před rokem +1

      I'm not sure what we would learn from it. If there was a gelatine block underneath, the bolt would partly push rings into it. The entire setup would depend a lot on how tight or loose the mail is mounted. When we started test I was hoping for any results that would make us see a difference between the patches - suitable for a measureable comparison. I wasn't so sure about the outcome.

  • @TheCompleteMental
    @TheCompleteMental Před 10 měsíci +3

    I wonder if you could manufacture rings in a way that doesnt compromise an area around the rivet, since I assume the thinness there is what causes the failiure

    • @stewiebalew6446
      @stewiebalew6446 Před 6 měsíci +2

      I would be curious as to the future of steel 3d printing and it's implications for making a solid ring maille. No butts, no welds, just solid formed interlocking rings

  • @manatoa1
    @manatoa1 Před rokem +1

    Really interesting

  • @MendocinoMotorenWerk
    @MendocinoMotorenWerk Před rokem +4

    @Ironskin what are your broader conclusions from the tests? Is any kind of rivet superior? Is there a good ratio of wire and rivet diameter? Provides flattening the rings any advantage? Thank you for this very interesting video. Amazing stuff.

    • @Ironskin
      @Ironskin  Před rokem +11

      Good question that you raise! I want to hear more such questions. I'm thinking there should be a follow-up video to sum up what we learned from this.

  • @jungoder1085
    @jungoder1085 Před rokem +1

    Didn’t expect the mail to hold up as well as it did this was really cool
    also what was the music in your intro?

  • @biblybims9868
    @biblybims9868 Před 11 měsíci

    You can tell,that even with a chainmail armour suit on,them arrows are still gonna leave you bashed up

  • @XtreeM_FaiL
    @XtreeM_FaiL Před 3 měsíci

    Chain mail is like a panzer tank.

  • @DS-px5mq
    @DS-px5mq Před rokem

    What was the padding? Also what was under it? Thanks for the video, loved the traction strength test.

    • @Ironskin
      @Ironskin  Před rokem +3

      Under the mail there is this dummy which is just a linen bag stuffed with cloth. It may have with its bounciness repelled bolts from sticking, that would have been stuck in a gelatine block.

  • @thomaskovacs5094
    @thomaskovacs5094 Před 11 měsíci

    Workmanship and design aside, id say the metallurgical differences between modern wires and wrought iron could vary considerably from historical models.

  • @lscibor
    @lscibor Před rokem

    Two observations:
    - at least one shot, at around 4:50, seems to be done with different crossbow? Composite one, instead of steel, with very different decoration on a tiller. How do those two compare?
    Interesting that Terry's and Dullies' mails in particular have very similar dimensions, yet one is apparently almost 40% heavier. Does the difference lie with the rivets and overlap size?

    • @Ironskin
      @Ironskin  Před rokem +3

      Well observed! We had different crossbows at hand. The weaker crossbow appeared to be the best option to observe different behavior amongst the patches. Only for that one shot we couldn't hold back our curiosity to see the stronger crossbow in action. Yet we didn''t rate that as part of the competition.
      Asher Terrys wire is 1.5mm and Paul Dullies is 1.4mm. That explains for some of the weight difference. Often a rivet can make up for a quarter of a ring's weight. That also means a quarter of the total weight. If you can tweak that a little, you can tweak your total weight significantly. Same goes for the overlap size.

    • @lscibor
      @lscibor Před rokem +1

      @@Ironskin Yeah, I made quick search around Andreas Bichler's videos, and I spotted the same crossbow. (I think). It's cranequin spanned, so I assume it's at least around 700 pounds, though sadly it doesn't seem that it's specified anywhere. Would be interesting to see how it performs against same mail....
      As far as wire goes, when thinking about it, increasing the thickness from 1.4 to 1.5mm alone increases surface area of ring's cross-section almost exactly by 15% (assuming it's roughly round in cross-section). So this alone is pretty significant.

  • @TheCompleteMental
    @TheCompleteMental Před 9 měsíci

    Well now I'm wondering if there's really a point in not going higher ring thickness if it's that much better for its weight. You shouldve compared flexibility, and to an actual shirt or shirt-grade mail vs mail that is not flexible enough to be worn well.

  • @user-gc8wn1fm3z
    @user-gc8wn1fm3z Před 6 měsíci +2

    Good afternoon. Thank you very much for the video. Please tell us what is the thickness and diameter of the riveted rings of Mr. Asher Terry's rings from the USA and what kind of super steel is there that a crossbow with a tension of 220 kg can withstand?

    • @asherterry7173
      @asherterry7173 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Hi. I made my rings out of 16 gauge(1.3mm) rebar tie wire. The inner diameter is approximately 8mm.

    • @user-gc8wn1fm3z
      @user-gc8wn1fm3z Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@asherterry7173 Hi. Thanks for the reply. It's just that your rings have shown some incredible results. Can I find out the brand of the wire? Did you weld it, by the way?

    • @asherterry7173
      @asherterry7173 Před 3 měsíci

      @@user-gc8wn1fm3z I bought the wire in 3.5 lb rolls from Home Depot. I riveted my rings with wedge rivets.

  • @MCclawin
    @MCclawin Před rokem +2

    what type of steel is the chainmail made of? :)

    • @Ironskin
      @Ironskin  Před rokem +6

      The pieces are made of iron with a low carbon content, not too far away from mild steel. That was part of the requirements. I'm talking a bit more about it here: czcams.com/video/bc-kufntCwE/video.html

  • @Intranetusa
    @Intranetusa Před rokem

    Interesting video. Do you know the other important traits of the crossbows such as powerstroke or prod efficiency? Crossbow and bow power is determined by 3 main factors: prod efficiency, powerstroke, and draw weight. Knowing the draw weight of the crossbow alone is knowing less than half the equation of determining the crossbows power.

    • @Ironskin
      @Ironskin  Před rokem

      As Andreas Bichler told me, the draw-weight is 220kg, bolt weight is 53,5g, velocity is 49,3 m/s and the resulting energy from that is 65 J. On his channel (link in the description) you find more details about it. I'd be curious to know about powerstroke and prod efficeny. You seem to know more than me. Feel free to explain if it fits in a comment.

    • @Intranetusa
      @Intranetusa Před rokem

      @@Ironskin Thanks for the info. Powerstroke is the draw length minus brace height, and efficency is how much energy the prod can transfer into the bolt/arrow...and these factors are as important as the draw weight in determining a bow or crossbow's power.
      This is shown by Todd of TodsWorkshop's video where his 150lb modern crossbow that can outperform his 960 lb medival crossbow (higher kinetic energy testing both lighter and heavier bolts iirc) due to the modern crossbow's higher powerstroke and efficency. Or videos that show a bow with a significantly lower draw weight shooting projectiles with higher kinetic energy than crossbows that have a higher draw weight but lower powerstroke & efficency.
      ---
      Edit: Formula moved to new reply.

    • @Intranetusa
      @Intranetusa Před rokem

      ​ @Ironskin - Furthemore, there is a formula to estimate power in inch-lbs: Efficiency x draw weight x powerstroke x 1/2. The inch-lbs can then be converted into joules.
      For the 220kg (485lbs) Andreas Bichler crossbow, since you already know the velocity (49.3m/s) and weight (53.5g) of the bolt, and that the joules is at ~65 joules...that comes out to 575.3 inch-lbs. We don't know the powerstroke of that crossbow, but most medieval European crossbows have a 6 inch powerstroke (TodsWorkshop/Leo Todeschini's comments on myarmoury says 6-6.5 inch for war crossbows and 4.5-5 inch for hunting crossbows).
      So if we plug that into the formula, we get:
      485 lbs x 6 inch x Efficency x 1/2 = 575.3
      Efficency = 0.395.
      So based on a 6 inch powerstroke, Andreas Bichler's 485 lb crossbow would have about 40% prod efficency to shoot that 54.5 gram bolt at 49.3 m/s.
      Thus, with this equation, we can estimate the power of crossbows or bows if we know the variables powerstroke, draw weight, and efficency. Draw weight and powerstroke are easy to test on the crossbow itself, while efficency is harder to test but you can extrapolate efficency based on similar designs of very similar bows/crossbows.

  • @Dan-gs3kg
    @Dan-gs3kg Před 9 měsíci

    Where's the write up on what seems to be the best?

  • @erihmann1560
    @erihmann1560 Před 11 měsíci

    No "watershed" ridges on the ring overlaps, no oval shaping of the rings. Oh well....

    • @brianhowe201
      @brianhowe201 Před 11 měsíci

      Oh? That sounds interesting. Could you tell the rest of us about that?

  • @p.a.c.5889
    @p.a.c.5889 Před 11 měsíci

    Can you make a video about tools

  • @mediamass1404
    @mediamass1404 Před 7 měsíci

    Was Male Quenched after the connection?

  • @IceBreakSS
    @IceBreakSS Před rokem +1

    Very interesting! 4 mm id?

    • @Ironskin
      @Ironskin  Před rokem +3

      Yes, well spotted. The smallest sample of rings has 4.6mm ID.

    • @IceBreakSS
      @IceBreakSS Před rokem +1

      @@Ironskin danke. Good luck 🤞

  • @Cahirable
    @Cahirable Před rokem

    An excellent video, but I wouldn't mind knowing more about the test setup for the crossbow test (construction of the dummy, what textile defence was under the mail, etc).
    I was also surprised at how light the bolt was. For a 220kg crossbow (extremely heavy for battlefield use!) I'd have thought at 60-80g bolt would be more appropriate.

    • @lscibor
      @lscibor Před rokem +1

      220 kg crossbow isn't really particularly heavy at all, heavy crossbows were generally 400+ in draw weight and likely larger in dimensions too.

    • @Cahirable
      @Cahirable Před rokem +1

      @@lscibor I have to disagree. You can't draw more than a 200-230kg crossbow with manual spanning devices, and that's allowing for belt and pulleys or levels. Cranequins were expensive devices used by mounted men, not infantry as a rule, and art shows simply belt and hook spanning devices in many parts of Europe well into the 15th century. Windlass crossbows, if they were ever used in the field, had a very limited period of use in the 15th century and were probably mostly confined to sieges.
      180-200kg would have been much more common for infantry in the 15th and 16th centuries, especially in Central Europe. In Western Europe, they may actually have been 150-180kg for the most part.

    • @Ironskin
      @Ironskin  Před rokem +3

      Under the mail there was just a bag of linen filled with cloth. Admitedly that does play quite a role in how we see bolts behaving - them getting stuck or bouncing off. For us it mattered most how the pieces of mail would compare to each other - not so much what damage the bolts would do to a block of gelatine or therelike. Of course that is interesting, too.

    • @molochi
      @molochi Před rokem

      @@Cahirable What you are saying has merit and is logical. Yet artwork depicts the Genoese Crossbowmen using windlasses, not belt and hook, which implies the use of a very heavy crossbow in very large numbers by well funded armies.

    • @molochi
      @molochi Před rokem

      @@Ironskin On the subject of balistic gel. It was developed by the FBI to repeatedly model bullet penetration on soft tissue. Though it would provide a homogeneous medium for testing, I'm not sure that it would provide useful data against the low energy, cutting nature of an arrowhead beyond "how well an arrow/bolt penetrates gel" and it's rather expensive to use. I'd be fine with wet clay block tests (of measured material density) personally, though that would likewise, just show relative penetration in clay. But it might be cheaper and would be retestable. Likewise there are some cheaper, balistic gel knockoffs for sale on the interweb that are of dubious nature for comparison with the FBI stuff, but are at least comparable inside their brand.
      Just food for thought.

  • @MarcRitzMD
    @MarcRitzMD Před 11 měsíci

    You have to fix your exposure!

  • @clownindan
    @clownindan Před 11 měsíci

    Creating that armor is so time consuming.

  • @GulliJ
    @GulliJ Před rokem

    Extremely interesting! Thank you for this share! Cheers from best country ever in knight capacities 🇲🇫

  • @linkohki
    @linkohki Před 6 měsíci

    what is the diameter of the crossbow bolt?

    • @linkohki
      @linkohki Před 6 měsíci

      my arrow went straight though my 9 mm chainmail

    • @linkohki
      @linkohki Před 6 měsíci

      the arrows were 5 mm diameter

  • @SenorTucano
    @SenorTucano Před 6 měsíci

    Did anyone do 6 in 1 mail?

  • @Dergownik
    @Dergownik Před 11 měsíci

    somebody show this to todd from todds workshop

  • @O.LEO.N
    @O.LEO.N Před 9 měsíci

    Er du dansker?? 🇩🇰

  • @Unpainted_Huffhines
    @Unpainted_Huffhines Před rokem

    I think I detect a little homerism in the outcome...

  • @mzurran1003
    @mzurran1003 Před 3 měsíci

    is there going to be another chainmail Olympics?

    • @Ironskin
      @Ironskin  Před 3 měsíci +1

      Could be, maybe every couple years. Feel free to like this comment to show interest.

    • @mzurran1003
      @mzurran1003 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Ironskin I would also like to see other categories outside of historical, such as those using modern alloys or patterns found outside of western Europe. I feel it could give insight into why European 4 in 1 was so popular for so long.

  • @ianbruce6515
    @ianbruce6515 Před 10 měsíci

    The crossbow seems to be a German hunting bow. Not as powerful as a heavy military crossbow.
    I can understand why this might be useful to compare damage--as a military crossbow at that range would penetrate at every shot, surely? Though, no doubt, it might be compareable at short range, to a military bow at much greater range.
    Fascinating video!

  • @greatnoblelord
    @greatnoblelord Před rokem

    nothing is clear - on what basis are the chain mail superimposed? The base should correspond to the under-fitting clothes and the body, i.e. not be rigid - if it is rigid, then all the energy goes to the penetration, and if it is not rigid, the elasticity absorbs part of the energy. How deep does the arrow go behind the chain mail ? The task of the chain mail is to protect against a cutting blow by blunting the weapon, and the main protection fell on the under-the-shoulder clothing -gambeson, doublet, etc.. In addition, the historicity of the materials of arrowheads and chain mail is not indicated - at the time corresponding to the crossbow used, both arrowheads and chain mail were iron.

    • @jamesj4827
      @jamesj4827 Před 10 měsíci +1

      1: These points are meaningless when all mail was tested in the same manner, it shows a direct comparison of how each mail acts compared directly to the other pieces, and that was the challenge,
      2: The power of that crossbow would almost certainly stick into any backing, even if it was solid wood if it got good penetration. Tods workshop has shown this many times in his lockdown longbow tests and you see an example of this when the arm is hit on the retial armour used to back the sheets.
      3: There are historical examples that have shown heat treating of mail, so to claim it is ALL mail was iron is flat out false and frankly shows a shocking lack of research for someone making themselves out to be an expertly, it took me moments to double check what I remembered and I am a layman
      4: To claim all arrow heads were iron is ridiculous, in the 14thC there is much talk of case hardening being used after hints or outright demands given by historical text sources talking about arrow acquisition mentioning steel or steeled arrowheads. Tests show case hardening and waxing heads can make a notable difference to performance, if they could do it easily and it made a big difference they likely did it. As both waxing and case hardening would be lost to time historical examples would appear to be simple iron. In historical texts iron arrows were listed separately to steel and were cheaper to buy than the steel/steeled arrowheads, though the interpretation of 'steeled' varies case hardening seems to be the consensus
      5: It's nothing about blunting the sword, that is nonsense. The sword simply can't cut through it. And you REALLY think it was no good against piercing?
      I mean the spear nd bow were only the main weapons on the battlefield for 1000's of years where chain mail was in use, and but clearly all those people before the coat of plates was invented were just stupid and dumb primitive fools, and all got stabbed to death by all the people on the field with spears. I mean come on use a brain ffs.
      Mail was even used in early jousting, much like late jousting armour it would likely have been specialist.
      High quality well made and in particular specialist mail, has incredible piercing resistance, demonstrated by Todsuff when their aventail was able to stop arrows form a 160lb war bow from close range.
      I don't usually like to go off on people, but you come in here making yourself out to be an expert, making sweeping statements many of which are flat out wrong, even as a simple historical enthusiast, with far less understanding of history than the artisans involved in this video, I was able to see your points missed reality on almost every case
      This video was a wonderful, and was made for fun, to let masters of their craft from across the world go head to head in test conditions
      They don't claim this is a good analogy for combat conditions. It was simply a good example of just how much better, hand crafted artiisan mail, is than the mass produced off the shelf variety,

    • @greatnoblelord
      @greatnoblelord Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@jamesj4827 child, what is the manner of arguing with yourself?First, Todd's videos themselves say that only two arrowheads were found in the whole of England. Meanwhile, in our even in the smallest, provincial towns, in local museums, arrowheads, since the Bronze Age, are like dirt. So, less wet fantasies.
      Further, Tod claims that he is conducting tests, and not a circus - this directly follows from his statements.
      In addition, I advise you to go to practice hand-to-hand fighting, or boxing, to understand that not every blow leads to a knockout, and with armor - they protected from blows in which full force is not invested. After all, your words can be turned like this - for 1000 years people used swords, spears, bows, that they were so stupid to use them against impenetrable chain mail?
      Of course, the chain mail was of different quality - there is a letter from the Crimean tsar to the Russian tsar, when there was still friendship between Crimea and Russia (until the 20s of the 16th century), which contains a request to send another chain mail that arrows do not pierce, but such chain mail, they were called armor, were expensive and not even every boyar and not that a knight, a nobleman or a boyar's son could afford them. I will not answer all the semi-literate, purely commoner nonsense, but I will ask you to explain how the chain mail can be made otherwise than manually? Only a person who does not understand how chain mail is made can allocate handmade mail. Yes, if the rings are welded, etc. chain mail will be more expensive, But chain mail is always a piece of work - a medical fact and nothing personal.

    • @jamesj4827
      @jamesj4827 Před 10 měsíci +1


      But the constant reference to steel and steeled and hardend arrows in historical texts and the punishments outlined for providing arrows that did not met the grade to the crown speak to that.
      Right now to turn your argument around
      'we have found almost no examples of swords with a grip on the hilt from the viking age, so we know they did not use them'
      Do you even understand what case hardening is? I mean, it was used in several of the videos tod put out so I would hope you bothered to pay attention considering the historical texts seem to support the practice and tod explained how it degrades in his videos and to memory, that his opinion is that case hardening would have been used
      I practiced martial arts in the past sweetheart, I never said a single blow lands a knock out every time, so again your talking nonessential rubbish to try and bluster your way over the litany of errors you made.
      Why do you think weapons adapted to increase their penetrative potential as mail become more and more common hun? Look at viking era swords vs late medieval
      Your like a mask denier 'it's not 100% effective so that means it is useless'
      As mail became cheaper and more wildly used, weapons adapted to be better at countering it, as plate armour came in, likewise.
      Mail eventually did become relatively cheap and wildly used, that does not mean this mail was of the same quality of that of a well to do knight.
      As tod spoke of, and as is blatantly clear. Armour quality varied, through time region, cost and smith.
      However, I did not say good mail is unbeatable, I said it is restive depending on quality, if your to bone headed to understand the difference in resistive and 'proof', then thats telling.
      I mean come on, I literally SAID armour varied in quality ffs, now your just repeating what I said and making it like you know more wtf, just take the L bud
      Fucking hell do you not understand the term ARTISAN vs MASS PRODUCED
      'Handcrafted' artisan mail, is a comonly used term refering to the highest quality of mail. Mail taht costs $1000's not $100's. It is leagues apart from the 'handcrafted' cheap off the shelf mail. We see that time and time again in tests, the factors why are many, from the quality of the metal, the quality and uniformity of the produced rings themselves, the treatment of the rings in production. And of course smiths will TAILOR the armour to your requirements, just as HIGH QUALITY mail would have been made, in the classic armour trade off of Protection and Mobility. Ring diameter/thickness. can be addapted to the clients needs, ie if it was armour used in a joust, vs if it was armour in a complex joint.
      We see this all over the world, some examples even tailoring ring characteristics within a single piece to give the best of both worlds.
      Now I know you wee raised to think that mail was useless against the stab, and you don;t want to change your mind, your probably old, and old people don;t like to be wrong
      Personally I used to foolishly believe the same, that all mail was dog to a thrust. However, watching artisan armour being tested, even in this video, and more so by tods aventail. shows it is far more resistivity than many believe
      Even as far as learning tha with the right weave mail can become stiff and somewhat resitive to blunt force. Such as in artisan mail standards, with heavy duty weaves that will act more like a solid plate, natrually this makes sense to protect the throat, both with layers and stiffer armour.
      Now I';m not saying I know everything, my point was you came in like yo were fucking Tobias Capwell, but made many provable false claims.
      I had to double check once or twice, but it was easy to find information from historical source contradicting your blanket statements
      Rarther than back down, you doubled down and again claimed all arrowheads were iron. When this is not considered fact.
      Lack of historical pieces does NOT mean it did not happen, as in my example.
      As another
      Vikings rarely used shields, as we have few surviving examples of viking shields
      Or that they didn't use ropes and string as we have very little surviving evidence of any

  • @cernel5799
    @cernel5799 Před 8 měsíci

    3:40 You are using the wrong bolt. Piercing mail is done by going into it as if with a needle and popping the ring from its sides. The proper kind of bodkin is usually currently called "needle bodkin": very thin and with sharp sides. Even if failing, the bolts should have got stuck in the armour most of the times, not bounced off like most of the bolts in this video.
    Todd made a video about this. This is more or less the kind of bodkin you should have been using:
    czcams.com/video/Uoz0eggQen8/video.html
    You can see the difference between that bolt-head and the quarrel which you used.
    I tend to think that you would have penetrated the armour very effectively every time had you used a proper bolt.
    I hope you'll do an other video using the correct bolt-head to see the difference. The other needed change (of course) is that the piece of mail needs to be fastened just as well as if it was a whole armour, otherwise it dissipates the force, reducing penetration.

    • @Ironskin
      @Ironskin  Před 7 měsíci +1

      In the video we wanted to compare the sheets amongst them. It was not the intention to contribute understanding to specific battlefield circumstances. A needle bodkin is a good idea. Maybe it would have revealed more differences between the meshes. Yet it could have been stopped early by the things behind the mail and thus not reveal much. In any way for the video we had to use what we had at hand.

    • @cernel5799
      @cernel5799 Před 7 měsíci

      @@Ironskin Yes, but (as I suppose you've noticed as well) I'm seeing A LOT of persons here in the comment that takes this as a "demonstration" that mail armour stops crossbow bolts most of the times (which is certainly not the case historically for a good one-foot crossbow at that distance).
      I think it's pretty inevitable that persons assume that you are using a bolt optimized for piercing mail. I did too.

    • @cernel5799
      @cernel5799 Před 7 měsíci

      The other thing is, of course, that our steel is better than what they had back then (and I surmise the makers used unhistorically very good steel being in competition, sorry for assuming), but I really made this comment because of all the comments I'm seeing about this "proving" that mail armour is good at stopping crossbow bolts point-blank.

    • @lscibor
      @lscibor Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@cernel5799 Not sure why it would not be the case.
      We have plenty of mentions about mail that was very resistant or almost immune to strong bows, and one foot crossbows were generally considered equal to "hand spanned" bows in proofing system, while winch operated crossbows were generally considered stronger.
      There was huge variety of mail being made in medieval period, and it was quite apparently. subjected to proofing system, just like breastplates or brigandines.
      From 1398 we have mention of " camisiam ferream, ex circulis ferreis contextam, per quae nulla sagitta arcus poterat hominem vulnerare." "Shirt of iron, woven from iron rings, trough which no man wielded bow could wound a man".
      From 1390 we have "Achettez de Simond Brufaler armeur, de mons . . . per le pris de un auberjon d'acier de toute botte."
      "Steel haubergon of full proof" - that's how "de toute botte" seems to be translated, it literally means roughly something like "of whole blow".
      Also from 1390 we have mention about mail were every link was stamped with mark of proof that it was " de botte casse". Seems insane, but apparently ,it was done due to the fact that singe plaque with mark could be obviously forged more easily. And we know of Islamic mail with stamp on almost every ring.
      Italian military manual from around 1450 recommends mail instead of brigandine for light cavalry, because they stop crossbows, bows, spears, swords and handgonnes and cover more area, which is fascinating, particularly firearms were traditionally considered too much for mail, though it obviously all depends on exact energy, distance etc. There are Polish sources about mail stopping bullets, but they seem to indicate that the padding of raw, unspun silk was most important there.
      As far as needle bodkin goes, it was traditionally considered best against mail, but it may not be the case, after all.
      We already have some interesting experiment out there:
      czcams.com/video/tq_Bvc-0w08/video.html
      We can see long needle bodkin curled on some very light mail, 0.65-7mm wire i only about 25% as thick as say, 1.4 mm wire, 1mm wire is about half as thick. That's some kind of delicate wire, almost.
      If that bodkin hit something like say, mail from Piquia, with 4.7 to 6 mm ID with 1.7mm x 1.84mm thick wire, it would probably get rolled like a party horn.
      Shorter, stouter bodkin may actually be more optimal here, actually, pointy enough to pry the links open, but more structurally sound.

    • @cernel5799
      @cernel5799 Před 7 měsíci

      @@lscibor Let me clarify that I've no personal experience on the matter: I don't shoot medieval replicas of bows or crossbows against anything.
      >one foot crossbows were generally considered equal to "hand spanned" bows in proofing system
      I'm not seeing how this can be the case assuming we are actually talking of good horn-and-sinew for the crossbow at least. That statement could make sense if both the bow and the crossbow are made of simple wood and the bow is long (so I guess this statement comes from someone who tested something like that, which is not the matter at hand).
      Here we are talking of good composite horn crossbows (not wood) spanned by guys that are good at that (so can easily span the 220 kg at this video or more).
      This video was indeed a very good missed chance of showing how easily a crossbow can pierce mail had a proper bolt-head been used, and (again) the iron they had back then was significantly weaker than what we can get now (which affects the armour more than the bolt-head). Also a simple leaf-shaped head would have done it, provided it was sharp of course.
      I'm sorry to say because I've a lot of appreciation for experiments like these, but I do believe this video is maybe unintentionally making misinformation, in that persons will unfortunately watch it and think that mail alone protecting you from point-black one-foot strong horn crossbows is a thing at all (which is not).
      Seeing an arrow or a bolt getting stuck in the armour while failing to penetrate is one thing (and that can happen), but seeing bolts bouncing off mail armour definitely means you are doing something wrong.
      I don't think I've ever mentioned bows, so those are off topic. Nevertheless, if we want to talk about that, I would agree that bows are very closely matched with mail armour, so either can prevail, and certainly there are cases of mail armour consistently defeating even composite horn bows (as well as cases of bows consistently defeating mail).
      Side note, I believe accounts of mail stopping arrows do often clarify that the arrows tend to remain stuck in the mail even when not piercing it, which is exactly what we are not seeing in this video.