Throwing knives

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • In which I point out that anyone intent on killing someone would almost certainly choose a different weapon.
    www.LloydianAspects.co.uk

Komentáře • 890

  • @VelmiVelkiZrut
    @VelmiVelkiZrut Před 10 lety +88

    I will politely point out that in some Asian cultures, the purpose of a throwing weapon (Shuriken in Japan, a category encompassing throwing knives, needles and stars) was in fact not to kill or injure but to make the opponent start, cover their face, or otherwise flinch and give the thrower extra time (to grab a sword, or just run out the door or something).
    Now, you would probably argue that you can achieve the same effect with a stone and it will be less expensive. It's also a motion that takes much more time and energy. If I want to hit you in the face with a rock hard enough that it would make a difference, I have to twist my body and put all of my mass behind that throw. With a throwing needle or star it only takes a flick of a wrist or upper arm, and so is quicker and takes less energy.

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland Před 10 lety +3

      I'd think that a Ninja, especially when found out and outnumbered, would throw whatever he could at the assembled guards so the throw would not have be very accurate. And of course while everyone reacts to the thrown things (knives, shuriken, stones, whatever), the Ninja would try to get away.

    • @OwariNeko
      @OwariNeko Před 10 lety +3

      AudieHolland Yeah, but the point was that if you want to get away you had better not spend a lot of time throwing a heavy rock.
      I mean, the thing you throw has to be some threat to your pursuers or else they really won't care. For that purpose any sensible person would pick a light, sharp/pointy item, not a pebble. If you pick something overly heavy you will just slow yourself down throwing it.

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland Před 10 lety +2

      OwariNeko Knives, shuriken, stones, whatever. Who said it had to be a heavy stone? Whatever, a handful of sand, some pebbles whatever. I never said it had to be heavy. Just something to distract the enemy, make them react defensively. Is a stone by definition a heavy object?

    • @saltspringdesign
      @saltspringdesign Před 3 lety

      exactly

    • @pfeilspitze
      @pfeilspitze Před 3 lety +1

      So throw a *card*. You can carry lots of those easily, they're cheap, they're light, throw great with a flick, and are also unlikely to kill or injure, but can still make them start and cover their face.
      Thus throwing knives (or stars or whatever) are still silly.

  • @bobsallee1245
    @bobsallee1245 Před 10 lety +32

    "It's all in the reflexes."

    • @yeeeuh9
      @yeeeuh9 Před 10 lety +6

      "Ya know what ol' Jack Burton says?"

  • @ashtonhouse2603
    @ashtonhouse2603 Před 8 lety +34

    LindyBeige, one film that I know of does indeed display other results of throwing knives, and that film is Kung Fu Hustle. Admittedly it is a comedy, but it does display far more reasonable results of throwing knives than most other hollywood movies. If you find yourself in need of a laugh I highly suggest it.

  • @wasumyon6147
    @wasumyon6147 Před 9 lety +44

    "WHO'S THROWING HANDLES!" After failed knife throwing attempt in Kungfu Hustle.

  • @TheTriforceofRubiks
    @TheTriforceofRubiks Před 9 lety +101

    Big Trouble in Little China: What's his face(forget his name) throws his knife at Lopan. Hits the wall, clutters to the floor. Total embarrassment.

    • @michaelanderson2166
      @michaelanderson2166 Před 9 lety +4

      I Love this movie!!!

    • @Ynffy
      @Ynffy Před 9 lety +3

      +TheTriforceofRubiks Good knife Mr. Burton!

    • @CapnHolic
      @CapnHolic Před 8 lety +1

      +Ynffy All in the reflexes.

    • @Ynffy
      @Ynffy Před 8 lety +1

      CapnHolic :D

    • @DopeItUp
      @DopeItUp Před 8 lety +2

      +TheTriforceofRubiks First thing I thought of. Thank you.

  • @funnyguy1700
    @funnyguy1700 Před 9 lety +51

    Because of you i will now make a movie where the main protagonist throws his only knife at the main antagonist and either misses and it bounces off the wall or just flat out hits the antagonist handle first...

    • @irishdevil5172
      @irishdevil5172 Před 9 lety +1

      +JerbearTheCarebear i would pay to see that

    • @leosteiner5619
      @leosteiner5619 Před 9 lety +4

      +JerbearTheCarebear That happens in Big Trouble in Little China. One of the funniest scenes in the film. I highly recommend it.

    • @yetanother9127
      @yetanother9127 Před 9 lety +1

      +JerbearTheCarebear
      (Throw)
      _Clunk!_
      "Ow!"

    • @funnyguy1700
      @funnyguy1700 Před 9 lety

      Jonathan Hughes yep thats gonna be the script lol

    • @juanenfermobastardo337
      @juanenfermobastardo337 Před 8 lety +1

      +Leo Steiner
      It's all in the reflexes!

  • @SimonAshworthWood
    @SimonAshworthWood Před 3 lety +15

    Lindy, you missed the main purpose of a throwing knife: pinning someone's clothing to a wall. If movies are to be believed, this happened very often in the past.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety +7

    In a battle you have a moving target most of the time, which makes judging the spin a matter of chance as well as judgement.

  • @ScienceDiscoverer
    @ScienceDiscoverer Před 8 lety +296

    Pommels are much more handy throwing weapons than knifes ;)

    • @stefanomorandi7150
      @stefanomorandi7150 Před 8 lety +57

      +ScienceDiscoverer also, what's the point in ending an enemy if you can't end him rightly?

    • @TheSchuetzeP
      @TheSchuetzeP Před 8 lety +9

      +ScienceDiscoverer Have I detected a random Skallagrim fan ;) :D

    • @ScienceDiscoverer
      @ScienceDiscoverer Před 8 lety +5

      Stefano Morandi
      Yea, better to heal your enemy and then have new fight to end him rightly!

    • @thomasfejdasz9907
      @thomasfejdasz9907 Před 8 lety +9

      if only he knew he had given birth to such a monster with that video.

    • @balazstorok9265
      @balazstorok9265 Před 7 lety

      Thomas Fejdasz he knows

  • @im1penguin
    @im1penguin Před 10 lety +17

    I'm not arguing for the effectiveness of throwing knives on a battlefield here, but as to your second point I felt an urge to mention that there are methods of "no-spin" knife throwing that make the one or two foot difference between you and the wall a non-factor in determining which side of the knife will hit. Someone would struggle to throw a knife more than 20 feet like that, but within a certain range it seems to me that there's nothing inherently inaccurate about a thrown knife hitting a wall close behind the hero point-first. Not until they include a slow-motion shot of the knife twirling through the air, or have a novice throw a kitchen knife like that.

  • @adam-k
    @adam-k Před 9 lety +79

    Just would like to point out that the intended use of japanese shurikens is disturbing or distracting the opponent. Basically you throw a handful of pointy things in the face of the enemy and attack (or run away) while he is occupied with the ducking or bleeding.

    • @adam-k
      @adam-k Před 9 lety +5

      ***** isnt glaive a type of pole arm? How do you throw that?

    • @adam-k
      @adam-k Před 9 lety +2

      ***** Hmm I was searching for "throwing glaive" on the internet but the only hits I found were out of fantasy books and games. Is there any historical reference that such thing exists?

    • @nimbalo300
      @nimbalo300 Před 9 lety +1

      ***** fantasy/video games are not really glavies a glavie is a polearm

    • @Juubelimies
      @Juubelimies Před 9 lety

      ***** yes but not a throwing polearm. i dunno where did you get this "throwing glaive" idea in the first place, but I'm maybe happier if I didn't know :D

    • @ugglarn2676
      @ugglarn2676 Před 9 lety +1

      Adam Koncz i know that the ninjas were not averse to using poison so im sure a shuriken could have been dipped in that to make it alot more lethal

  • @slarz1108
    @slarz1108 Před 9 lety +12

    I'll just add that It's very possible to throw a knife without spin, very forcefully. But all other points i agree with.

  • @dragonwithamonocle
    @dragonwithamonocle Před 4 lety +2

    I think that it should be noted that there was an exceptional use of a throwing knife in The Princess Bride, in which Count Ruegen pulls one from his boot (he's still got a sword, btw) and throws it at Inigo, who is wearing nothing but cloth. The knife must be quite sharp, because it sticks into his stomach and causes him to bleed quite a bit, which hinders him during the proceeding swordfight between the two of them. Here it is used as a last-ditch effort to wound someone and cause them pain and bleeding to make them weaker so that you can kill them easier with your main weapon, in this case, the rapier. It should be noted that Inigo takes a couple more light wounds to the arm and shoulder, pulls the knife out, and actually walks away from the fight after dispatching Ruegen. All in all, the knife was not super effective, but it did stick in the target.
    It should also be noted that Ruegen was being chased, and lead Inigo to a space of his choosing, and lined up his shot and waited at a specific distance at a doorway at the bottom of a staircase where he knew Inigo would be coming. He had every opportunity to line up his shot from the appropriate distance to ensure that if he hit, it would land point first. A very long stretch of extenuating circumstances in which the throwing dagger ultimately proved to be at least a little effective, but to a realistic degree.

  • @damiensouth1160
    @damiensouth1160 Před 8 lety +4

    Throwing a knife only makes sense in context. The typical "shurikan" was a sharpened bit of scrap/broken metal that "ninja" used as a dirty fighting trick to distract while fencing. Why not a rock? #1 you can hold a stack of them in your hand while fencing, then surprise them with a bit of sharpened metal, more than once or to more than one person. #2 As silly as it is humans are more afraid of a sharpened bit of metal, even though the stone could potentially cause more damage, thus making a flinch reaction more probable to occur.

  • @mr_lemons6370
    @mr_lemons6370 Před 4 lety +3

    This video can already be considered as history

  • @iamlordapollo
    @iamlordapollo Před 8 lety +29

    actually, there are multiple methods of throwing knives. the spinning method is not meant for combat. there is a method where its thrown blade first, doesnt spin at all, and this method allows you to put a great deal of power into the throw. using the proper combat technique, i myself have thrown my knives through a piece of 3/4" plywood. i threw is so hard, the tip of the blade stuck out about half an inch on the back of the plywood target. i've also sunk my blades at least 1 1/2" - 2" deep into living oak trees. i concede there are other more effective ranged weapons, but i just feel like this video does not do throwing knives justice. they can be incredibly deadly in the right hands. but thats kinda the whole point. its not something anyone can just use, its more of an obtained special skill you have to go out of your way to be competent at. its not a sword where anyone can just use it

    • @googlesuxbigtime1227
      @googlesuxbigtime1227 Před 8 lety +7

      I agree avout the knife.
      But a sword requires as much training as any weapon, if you intend on being effective with it.

    • @iamlordapollo
      @iamlordapollo Před 8 lety

      well any weapon requires training to use effectively. but a random person on the street will have a better chance picking up a sword and using it than a specialized weapon like throwing knives.

    • @CthulhuInc
      @CthulhuInc Před 7 lety +3

      what have you got against plywood and trees, you monster?

    • @ThatSB
      @ThatSB Před 7 lety +3

      Jamie Chevalier 3/4in penetration isnt deadly

    • @ThatSB
      @ThatSB Před 7 lety

      ppxoon what did he get wrong? everything he said is correct no matter how good you are with them

  • @Superabound2
    @Superabound2 Před 10 lety +2

    Well you have to understand that before the development of firearms (especially small, rapid fire ones), being able to strike an enemy at a distance, even if it was only to wound, represented a significant advantage. And yes, bows were already in existence and were extremely effective, but bows were typically large, nonconcealable, and slower to fire than a small blade kept handy.

  • @Jesses001
    @Jesses001 Před 10 lety +5

    Big Trouble in Little China: Hero throws a knife at main bad-guy. He misses and the knife bounces off a gong handle first and lands on the ground. Of course that is offset by the fact that bad-guy picks up knife and throws it back at the hero, who has a special reflex ability to catch things flying at his head...seriously they set that up in the opening shot of the movie, catches the knife in mid-air and throws it back at bad-guy right into the skull. Well they ALMOST had a realistic knife throw.

  • @jessthehuman
    @jessthehuman Před 6 lety +2

    Someone who I once met who threw "trick shot' knife throws, showed me a throwing still, where you essentially 'palm' the knife and 'sling' it in such a way, it never goes spinning through the air, but rather - it carries more like a dart. They were weighted different than a regular knife too.
    In films, they like to show them wildly spinning which is flawed for obvious reasons. But I'm tempted to watch now on CZcams, some throwing trick shots to see whether they spin them, or not. Again - they might still, because it looks 'cool'. But I guess my point is this - you *can* absolutely throw a knife, with reasonable force, without having it spin wildly through the air. I myself got good enough to easily hit a mark like a big tree 10 yards away.
    I'm by no means arguing their use in battle, or any such thing. Just mentioning that you can definitely throw them in a non-spinning fashion.

  • @ZennTempleRiffs
    @ZennTempleRiffs Před 10 lety

    You made a pertinent point there...about how they fall dead and quiet. Fighting that injures or kills always leads to a great deal of screaming. No human alive goes out in silence unless terrified of discovery, and even then it is tough to do. Anyone who has experienced tremendous pain knows it is hard not to scream.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety

    True, but rare. For one thing it requires an amount of dexterity greater than that of most actors.

  • @Candesce
    @Candesce Před 10 lety +2

    I've had the unfortunate experience of being hit, point first, by a pair of heavy, iron, sewing scissors, and I can confirm that you're unlikely going to die, but it does hurt a lot and it completely winded me.

    • @deewing6439
      @deewing6439 Před 3 lety

      i think it comes down to the blade not just a "pointy thing" ... and how much force ... lol

  • @RunicSSB
    @RunicSSB Před 9 lety +4

    Realistically, If someone got hit in the head with a knife, they'd freak out and would get ambushed while panicking about whether or not to leave it in.

    • @DaReaperZ
      @DaReaperZ Před 8 lety

      +CaptainTinTyrant Realistically, there's almost no way a knife could get stuck in the head if that's what you're implying. So no, no panic about whether or not to leave it "in"

  • @perrinlarson3842
    @perrinlarson3842 Před 10 lety +12

    As an amateur knife thrower, I would have to say that yes, throwing knives were never meant to be used as weapons in real battle. They are fun for target practice, but if I really needed a weapon that served that purpose in real battle, I would use some kind of dart, not a knife.
    I could MAYBE see knives being an effective weapon for someone who for some reason practiced half a lifetime in the use of this weapon, until judging distance and rotation of their throw was second nature, but then why would they not spend all that time practicing with a weapon more suited, like a dart?
    Last of all, I once heard of a friend of my friend... yeah... who practiced a lot with knives. He would keep them stuck in the walls around his room and had practiced throwing them at the door enough that he once went to sleep, and woke up to find that he had thrown them all into the door in his sleep.
    I suppose for him, in a situation where an intruder was coming in through the door, something sharp to throw would be quite effective, but yeah, that's kind of situational, and something he probably did for the heck of it that required more trouble and time commitment than most people would want to invest.

    • @perrinlarson3842
      @perrinlarson3842 Před 10 lety +4

      Actually, correction, I CAN see a reason someone might practice throwing knives instead of something more suited. In a society where EVERYONE and their grandmother is likely to have some kind of knife on them, the ability to consistently stick a pointy object into a remote target could actually be quite useful, whereas I doubt there EVER was a society where you could regularly count on a dart, or other such specialized tool, being handy.
      So again, MAYBE, there might have been a practitioner, somewhere. But that would have to have been the exception. Not the norm.

    • @ThatSB
      @ThatSB Před 7 lety +1

      Perrin Larson why a dart? that would do even less damage and have even less stopping power

    • @ThatSB
      @ThatSB Před 7 lety

      Perrin Larson and if you hit an intruder who doesnt want a fight with a throwing knife, yes it may be effective. but the video is discussing enemy combatants. as in "I need to incapacitate or kill him or I die". a throwing knife's chances of doing either of those is very very slim. the area of damage is too small snd the force is not there. not to mention the pain from a super sharp knife stabbing is not that bad if your adrenaline is going. youd be far better off with a dull knife. only problem is then it wouldnt penetrate

    • @deewing6439
      @deewing6439 Před 3 lety

      @@perrinlarson3842 i take it you have looked at no spin throwing ... and if you adjust i have seen people no spin throw over 12/15 feet with enough control and power to kill or atlest do nasty nasty damage ... enough to stop them lol ... it comes down to stopping power and distance really ... and how good the thrower is lol ...

    • @perrinlarson3842
      @perrinlarson3842 Před 3 lety

      @@deewing6439 Interesting. I had never heard of "no-spin" throwing. So I looked it up. And there is no such thing. So called "no-spin" throwing is absolutely no different than spin throwing. The knife still spins. Distance must still be judged to get the spin right. "No-spin" throwers are simply throwing with enough speed and at a short enough range that the knife doesn't have time to spin more than half a turn. I've done this plenty myself, of course. This is of course far easier than throwing at a target far enough that the knife must spin a full rotation or more, but it still takes a great deal of practice for it to become second nature.

  • @benyed1636
    @benyed1636 Před 7 lety +5

    You just have to make sure your knife has a pommel, so that if it doesn't hit them with the blade you can end them rightly instead.

  • @davidmorris1018
    @davidmorris1018 Před 8 lety +1

    The advantage is that the knife throwing protagonist can withdraw the aforementioned knife from the dead guy and make some kind of smug remark, berfore walking away casually or dealing with everything else in the battlefield.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 12 lety

    In the circus act I saw, the knives seemed pretty useless. The target was a stationary woman who stood in full view against a board just a few yards away. The 'master' didn't manage to hit her even once.

  • @allninelivez7631
    @allninelivez7631 Před 3 lety +1

    Lindy didn't know that 3 years after making this video, the greatest game "Skyrim" will be released.

  • @twentyzero4
    @twentyzero4 Před 10 lety +31

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but weren't weapons like the Shuriken designed to be thrown at an enemy to distract them, while you got closer for an actual attack?
    I mean, if someone throws a sharp piece of metal at your face, you either dodge it, block it with your shield or let it hit you. I think most people would chose one of the first two.

    • @reddokkfheg9443
      @reddokkfheg9443 Před 10 lety +10

      Correct. they where mostly used to distract the enemy. So you could either get a better chanse to attack them or flee. they where not really made for or used for killing someone

    • @olstar18
      @olstar18 Před 10 lety

      Reddokk Fheg
      Though a cut to the hands from one could give you an advantage.

    • @Zorriet
      @Zorriet Před 10 lety

      That's one thing naruto got right lol.

    • @ThatGuy182545
      @ThatGuy182545 Před 10 lety

      It's also used to deter people from pursuing you during an escape.

    • @Zorriet
      @Zorriet Před 10 lety +1

      *****
      I know lol.
      But shuriken never actually kill anyone in the show,they're used to distract or force the enemy to move somewhere.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 13 lety

    @BloodfromtheAshes A dart will hit point-first every time, and is rear _stabilised_, so possibly might be what you are looking for. Darts, unlike throwing knives, were used in battle.

  • @attackthem5
    @attackthem5 Před 13 lety

    Have to say, i really like this guy. Learning a good amount of "olden days" weaponry information.

  • @ulfsark78
    @ulfsark78 Před 8 lety +4

    Big trouble in little China. Lead character throws a knife and it bounces off the dong bell behind the villian.

    • @TonyMontana-zk6ib
      @TonyMontana-zk6ib Před 8 lety

      +Ulf Sark That that is one solid item how can a knife could stick into it?

    • @ulfsark78
      @ulfsark78 Před 8 lety

      +Anonymous surfer he asked for an example :P Plus its the movies, they make anything happen....people ripping hearts out with their bare hands ...

    • @TonyMontana-zk6ib
      @TonyMontana-zk6ib Před 8 lety

      Ulf Sark Yeah. I think a proper example would be the knife hitting an pierceable object and hitting by the handle and bouncing off.

    • @kyriss12
      @kyriss12 Před 8 lety +1

      +Anonymous surfer
      the knife didn't stick into the bell it hit the thing side ways and bunched off. that movie roasted the hell out of a lot of overplayed tropes. Like the part where the main character fired a gun at the ceiling to get everyone's attention, and a support beam falls on his head.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety

    @EmperorMossy Distraction, yes. A thrown anything, even air, is a distraction. Poisoning a shuriken would be a very bad idea. The chances of nicking yourself greatly out-weigh the chances of poisoning someone else, and unless you have extraordinarily fast-acting poison, the target will cut you down before he succumbs.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety

    @Tarantio1983 Black powder is for fireworks - big noisy things. The notion that one might use something that draws attention to you in an assassination might not be appealing. Grenades need lighting, and they haven't invented matches yet, so that's awkward when on a stealth mission, and once lit they go off after a fixed and unalterable time, and primitive ones either go off in your hand or too late. It might take a lot of development and persuasion to get people to use one in war.

  • @BlondeBeard18
    @BlondeBeard18 Před 8 lety

    I think I've genuinely laughed out loud at some point of each video of yours that I've watched, your use of humor to make your point(s) is spot on.

  • @yerk3
    @yerk3 Před 13 lety

    I saw a program where they were talking about the actual Iga ninja, and the shuriken they showed weren't of the star variety, but more of a long straight spike, like a weaponized lawn dart. They showed them being thrown underhand, with startling frequency, at a range of about 15 feet, and embedding them pretty well into a heavy wooden plank.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety

    @NateStei I don't recall where exactly he was hit, but it is possible to fight on for a while with a couple of arrows in you. A lot of arrow wounds would have been mortal, but few would have been instantly fatal. Through the heart or brain would quickly end you, but other places might take hours to kill you.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety

    Throwing a stone is cheaper for a start. In mock battles, death is a matter of personal style.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety

    @Tarantio1983 Throwing weapons are quick to use at short range, and good for use immediately prior to melee.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety +1

    Saw them. That's pretty much the way I tried. It's a slow spin technique - the blade has to pivot 90 degrees before impact, and the method of release reduces your power. Interesting to see that when the bearded guy goes through the method, he uses a weak throwing arm position off to his right, but in some of the shots of him showing off he uses a much more powerful long-arm technique that I wouldn't want to be hit by. Either way, if you wanted to kill, you'd choose another weapon.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 13 lety

    @martindhw Late Romans, yes. They could carry a few of these clipped to the inside of the shield.

  • @NateStei
    @NateStei Před 14 lety

    @NateStei Thank you for answering, I am a medieval fanatic and love learning about the weaponry. It is nice seeing others with the same interest as I do.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 12 lety

    @Beriorn Late Roman infantry had a few darts clipped to the insides of their shields.

  • @jamesbaseman7297
    @jamesbaseman7297 Před 8 lety

    like a stone but more expensive...love this guy...please never stop making vids

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 13 lety

    @Dragdamar I think their main use was against unarmoured horses.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 12 lety

    @DasFork Not sure who the 'you' is in this. I was criticising films in which such weapons are depicted as the preferred choice for an assassination - the weapons that actually do the deed. If they were for softening up an enemy, dramatically reducing his combat ability, then they would have been very common battlefield weapons.

  • @Pariah1974
    @Pariah1974 Před 8 lety +1

    Big Trouble In Little China has the throwing knife scene you seek. And really, anything and everything cool is in that film.

  • @tomcat2222
    @tomcat2222 Před 13 lety

    Thank you, this is a great video on why throwing knives were not thrown as the primary method of killing (they were experimented with, such as the Russian Special forces, and still used to my knowledge), in all but last resort situations. The ninjas sometimes poisoned their throwing weapons (with rust, or bacteria from the ground, etc.) for just the reasons expressed here, very rarely are they a fatal one hit, instant kill. Great video, look forwards to more.

  • @JGeMcL
    @JGeMcL Před 8 lety

    Chosenninja demonstrated knife throwing at good distance and accuracy but he used an underhand throw to prevent spin and the knife had a tail for stability like an arrow's fletching. I absolutely agree though that insta-kill is complete fantasy.

  • @Silirion
    @Silirion Před 11 lety

    Shuriken might be portrait as a star, but they came in lots of different forms. One usual form of shrunken was a 10" iron spike. + they were many times used as distractions.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 12 lety

    I know the knives you mean. They certainly were not designed for convenience of carrying nor whittling efficiency.

  • @ididthisonpulpous6526
    @ididthisonpulpous6526 Před 7 lety

    I would like to bring up the Spetsnaz train heavily on throwing knives, and even entrenching tools. I would say it's certainly not a primary battle implement, but they do train extensively in employing thrown weapons. I believe the reasons are in part that the force delivered on impact is quite high on a thrown weapon versus stabbing them by hand.

  • @nicolaiveliki1409
    @nicolaiveliki1409 Před 5 lety

    Actually, you made a real good impression of "ouch! Who throws a SHOE!?!?!?"

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety

    @EmperorMossy If you can come up with an example of a medieval poison that could kill quickly if introduced via a cut, and which had an effective antidote that could be administered even faster, then you'd have a good argument.

  • @usquanigo
    @usquanigo Před 11 lety

    Yes, you should. It's a classic, one of the all time greats. But, a sense of humor and love for 'serious but silly, yet so cool'.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 13 lety

    @chickenmadness1 Yes, it's almost as though the target never moves away or towards them, and they themselves stay on the spot, keeping the distance between them perfectly predictable and constant.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety

    @Cstrife234 They should throw darts, as some did: better accuracy, range and penetration, and guaranteed to hit point-first.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety

    Perhaps, in an emergency, yes, although you can throw anything to have this effect - even miming throwing nothing can work. I was dealing with the way throwing knives are commonly presented in films; as a primary means of killing.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety

    No, I don't think so. A stab could be far more powerful with the weight of the stabber behind it, and is far more likely to be well-placed.

  • @Bunnyfufu666
    @Bunnyfufu666 Před 8 lety

    Too what you said about side characters dying, I like how they handled extra's dying in the film Alexander(even though that movie had plenty of faults), the battle against the Persian army was filmed a lot like Saving Private Ryan's D-Day opening, in that you see soldiers being mutilated and not killed right away. They even included a scene of Alexander comforting a soldier as they were mercy killed after being horrifically maimed and out of the fight but not dead.

  • @thomaseskelsen1362
    @thomaseskelsen1362 Před 5 lety

    Love your channel, man. Amature blade throwing geek here. There is a great throwing knife scene in the movie "The Crow"
    Several missed throws, that one!

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 11 lety

    There are specialist designed-for-throwing knives.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety

    @9123flash If they are heavy enough to kill no matter which part hits the target, then (a) they are VERY heavy and not a convenient load, and (2) why not just throw a brick or perhaps a tree trunk?

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety

    @brovell Excellent. A brave exception. Also, a comedy.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 11 lety

    I'm not saying it's impossible, but just that it would not be the killing weapon of choice. If you want to _kill_ someone rather than hamper or distract him, then your first choice would be something considerably more lethal.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 13 lety

    @link0099 There are techniques that make for very slow spins, yes, but no evidence that these were used in battle, or for assassinations, or hunting, so what does that leave? Mucking around in the back garden?

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 13 lety

    @TheChannelofChibiX3 There are some amazing throwing knives from Africa. Quite different objects.

  • @nateofthesouth
    @nateofthesouth Před 3 lety

    "...out of politeness..." Lines like that are why I subscribe!

  • @ModSea
    @ModSea Před 11 lety

    Shuriken were actually more commonly used as a utility tool/close combat weapon. For the first purpose the square hole in the middle could be used to pry nails out. Held in the hand (which was possible because usually only the last half of each point was sharpened on Japanese shuriken) they worked as effectively pointy, multi-directional brass knuckles. They would be very hard to see, especially in poor light so the wielder may appear unarmed.

  • @brandonmarcial2792
    @brandonmarcial2792 Před 10 lety +1

    On the matter of the viability in throwing knives and shurikens:
    Many times they had a venomous coating on them. As for why not an envenomed arrow? Bows are much bigger than a throwing knife or shuriken which can be concealed in a pocket.
    By no means are they viable in warfare. But they were not war weapons either. And as for "well why not walk up to the guy and assassinate him?" Easy: Between you and the target might be the LoS of another patrol. A knife going through the air will get less attention than a person running, they might not even notice the movement of something that small in the dark.

  • @tohopes
    @tohopes Před 8 lety +5

    Wat. You can throw a knife at someone and as long as it hits them in the head or in the back they will die silently and instantly. This I learned from Far Cry games. Angle shmangle.

  • @permhaaland
    @permhaaland Před 13 lety

    good point. However, you shouldn't disregard it altogether: a throwing knife is front heavy, it straightens up during its course towards the opponent like a dart. If it's not a throwing knife you avoid throwing it at all costs(though there are some exceptions to this as well)

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 13 lety

    @10dmcghee Better to use a dart. You wouldn't get a full-power throw with the knife, and it would still spin a bit.

  • @KristaOconnors
    @KristaOconnors Před 11 lety

    There is a knife throwing method in which the knife does not spin. It is quite possible to miss your target and still sink the tip in the wall behind them if you miss using this method.

  • @jokul_
    @jokul_ Před 11 lety

    There isn't enough rotational force to cause it to do so. There is a reason it's called the "no spin throw" and not the "so close it can't spin more than once" throw. Watching the video shows the throw having the same effect at multiple ranges, and it appears to be the "knuckleball" of knife throws.

  • @martinallen1655
    @martinallen1655 Před 3 lety +1

    Big Trouble In Little China - Jack Burton (Kurt Russell) threw a knife that missed his target and clanged hilt first into a wall. Kudos to Director John Carpenter.

  • @k03nima
    @k03nima Před 12 lety

    That is the way I've used them (when I used to train that sort of martial arts). Someone comes running towards you, you throw a handfull of them at your opponent, and as he ducks and loses momentum you can finish them off with your sword.
    But it is the surprise of something being thrown straight at you more than killing power that makes them useful. You could also use pepper or sand to the same effect but with less range.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 12 lety

    Or the sense to pick a more effective weapon?

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 11 lety

    Have done. It's a very slow spin.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 13 lety

    @AcdcStoner Do you have an historical example of an assassination carried out by throwing knife?

  • @MrMorphine482
    @MrMorphine482 Před 10 lety

    We do knife throwing demos with my sword school regularly. Everyone from trained throwers to hobbyists to people who've never held a knife in their lives has tried, and the same results always happen - no consistency in hitting blade-in, very little good aim, and putting force behind it will sometimes rarely result in a knife bouncing off the striking surface and arcing back towards the crowd.
    We have two people with shields on the sides of the line, on-guard and ready to dive in the way of a thrown knife to deflect it. I've been one of those people, and had to deflect a knife once, and it does provoke all the "OHCRAPBITOFMETALCOMINGFORMYEYES!" reflexes you can think of in one's lizard brain. It's fun nontheless, even if it's only to show you demonstrably where one can and can not use a throwing knife to your advantage.

  • @mixcow
    @mixcow Před 14 lety

    Throwing knives, there is a reason Paul Veerhoven included them in the training regime of the Mobile Infantry in the anti-war film Starship Troopers.
    Throwing knives were used as diversionary weapons - to force an enemy to protect their face from the risk of impairment to vision and thus creating an opening for an incapacitating strike - poisons would be counter conducive to this purpose because they would require careful handling by the wielder, detracting vital seconds from actually throwing

  • @leonelpowers5979
    @leonelpowers5979 Před 10 lety +1

    One thing that makes throwing knifes a bit more useful is preventing it from sniping, the Russians have a trick for throwing knifes in such a way, basically you throw the knife normally but just as it leaves your hand you are supposed to apply a bit of for on the opposite direction of the knife spin. If done right you stop the knife from spinning, making it so that you don't need to calculate distance. (of course this requires a lot of practice)
    Now, I'm not saying that makes it a perfect battle tactic, but if you have two knifes and somebody is running at you with a musket it might be useful to hit them with the first one to stop their momentum, rather than fighting him head on with your lack of reach.
    Just something I tough would be nice to mention.

    • @Thrand11
      @Thrand11 Před 10 lety

      Well said :D

    • @jamesbaker7037
      @jamesbaker7037 Před 10 lety

      ***** I agree that with you that it can be used as an improvised projectile if needs be, but I agree with Lindybeige that knives are either an inferior choice or an expensive choice.
      Also you mention that it takes training to wield a throwing knife effectively. I infer you already know that this isn't ideal; why not train using other weapons or defensive tools that avoid the need for small range projectiles. Or save time and money and go back to using rocks!
      I am interested to see this Russian knife throwing thing. Are there any videos I should look at for a good demo?

    • @Thrand11
      @Thrand11 Před 10 lety

      We did reply to this video and use quarter spin or no-spin which is basically the Same a Russian and I throw one throw at the end in that style :D
      czcams.com/video/J22AN_AAWTE/video.html

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 12 lety

    Yes. That would increase the chance of killing your target by 25%, and the chance of killing yourself by 1872%.

  • @Nirmav_Nirmav
    @Nirmav_Nirmav Před 5 lety

    I believe I heard somewhere that the elite Roman legions way late in Roman history started using heavy darts and throwing knifes instead of pilas.

  • @usquanigo
    @usquanigo Před 11 lety

    A third possibility - and the answer to your question about a movie where the knife misses and doesn't stick - Big Trouble In Little China, Jack misses, Lo Pan picks it up and throws it back (where Jack then for a brief instant becomes the hero he thinks it is as he catches it, throws it back, and sinks it to the hilt in Lo Pan's skull. Yeah, I know, but it works with the movie)

  • @ThewasupmanHO
    @ThewasupmanHO Před 11 lety

    A good portrayal of throwing knives is the movie Desperado. One of the baddies in the film uses throwing knives against Antonio Banderes. He gets hit with like 8 of them. Not lethal, but he is in a lot of pain and is bleeding everywhere. One of the few semi-realistic things in the film. It's bad about having shotgun blasts send dudes flying and stuff.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 12 lety

    It is next to impossible to throw a knife with _no_ rotation, but there are those who throws them with a rotation so slow that the knife can land point-first without having made one spin. If this is your goal, though, why not use darts?

  • @ELITEHAMSTER123
    @ELITEHAMSTER123 Před 12 lety

    @lindybeige there are methods to no spin the knife where the point is always forward, but I completely agree with your commentary. Even Japanese ninjas only carried shurikens to just have something to throw while they get closer. None of it was intended to kill, or even really stun much.

  • @awkwardcultism
    @awkwardcultism Před 4 lety

    Shuriken were used during an era of Japan where non-samurai weren't allowed to carry weapons.
    The famous star-shaped shuriken is the carpentry tool that Japanese people used to remove nails from wood instead of hammers. Ninja would sharpen these for use in combat.
    They might not be the best weapons, but if you were searched by a guard they might not take them from you because they looked just like a hand tool.
    They also lack a handle, so you don't have to worry about how much they spin.
    Even if they weren't perfect, they were a great option in a country where even knives were banned.

  • @raysetiger285
    @raysetiger285 Před 13 lety

    @lindybeige wile there are some good points here, there is a technique of throwing throwing knives so they dont spin. The knife dosnt fly through the air as fast, but you dont have to worry about the knife not hitting point first

  • @jokul_
    @jokul_ Před 11 lety

    The rotation only occurs early as the blade is leaving the hand. You sill see that after that the knife does not spin and continues to fly in the direction it was released at.

  • @f33lsg00dm4n
    @f33lsg00dm4n Před 12 lety

    @lindybeige Actually, you mentioned an excellent point that would essentially prohibit throwing knives from being common on the battlefield, regardless of their effectiveness: the cost. Mustering a military is a tremendous expense for a government, and the infantry is commonly the first point of "expense reduction." Both in terms of equipping and training, throwing knives are too expensive to ever see common status on the battlefield in the ranks of the infantry.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety

    @aztecas91 So you are seriously suggesting that you'd choose a throwing knife over a bow or javelin?

  • @Llyranon
    @Llyranon Před 13 lety

    Further mention that no spin throwing techniques are taught, albeit briefly, to members of Canadian special forces, and I'd hazard the guess that similar units in other countries may have similar training. No spin works well with modern combat knives and bayonets.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 13 lety

    @amorphusensanity I don't think Kung Fu Hustle was a Hollywood film.

  • @Rainbows871
    @Rainbows871 Před 8 lety

    To quote wikipedia on shurikens "Contrary to popular belief, shuriken were not primarily intended as killing weapons, but rather in a secondary role[4] as a nuisance or distraction. Targets were primarily the more exposed parts of the body: the eyes, face, hands, or feet. The shuriken would sometimes be thrown in a way that slashed the opponent in a glancing blow and travelled on, becoming lost, causing the opponent to believe that the cut had been made by an invisible swordsman."

    • @DaReaperZ
      @DaReaperZ Před 8 lety

      +Rainbows871 Sounds reasonable, until the invisible swordsman part. I mean, you'd see the shuriken, and hear it landing behind you. There's just no way...

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 14 lety

    Think about it: a shuriken is sharp all the way round, and is kept in small bundles where it is quick to access. It is grabbed in a hurry in the dark with the hands, to be thrown. Do you think that makes it a good choice of weapon to poison? Do you have any actual evidence that they were ever poisoned?

  • @macomputersuck
    @macomputersuck Před 7 lety

    In the hunger games a throwing knife hits the main protagonist and she survives.

  • @CollinInGame
    @CollinInGame Před 8 lety

    I noticed this too when i was a kid. Some friends and I had gotten some throwing knives, and went to try them out on like old wooden garage doors and trees and what not. Hitting the target wasn't a problem, it was getting the knife to actually hit with the blade. I just assumed there was some sort of secret technique of throwing, to make sure it always rotated at the exact speed depending on the distance etc..... lul.