Arrows v's silk shirts and other myths

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
  • There are so many myths about the longbow.....and I look at 3 popular ones in this vid. Are arrows easier to remove when you wear a silk shirt? Can arrows shoot through 3"/75mm oak doors? Do arrows spin so fast they drill into targets?
    Well that is mostly what the film is about, but it is also partly about the importance of truth....
    If you would like to help support this channel, visiting my websites is a great help
    Highly accurate budget historical weapons todcutler.com
    Museum quality custom weapons todsworkshop.com
    Our T shirts are available here, including our new "Knight Vision" teespring.com/stores/todswork...
    To really understand why I am using this crossbow as a testing platform and why it is useful to do so, watch this first video in the series • CRAZY idea... War bow ...
    Edited like all my LDLB films, by Greg Bright

Komentáře • 1,9K

  • @tods_workshop
    @tods_workshop  Před 3 lety +207

    The origins of the silk shirt myth? A comment taken from my FB page "Jonathan Alvekrans Regarding the latest video, the silk shirt myth seems to originate from James Chambers' book The Devil's Horsemen, published in the 70s. He gives no source for his stement and all other mention of this appears to go back to that book. books.google.se/books?id=tbTNDwAAQBAJ&lpg=PT62..."

    • @theaquarian5849
      @theaquarian5849 Před 3 lety +5

      You put a lot of thought into this 👍

    • @rabidmidgeecosse1336
      @rabidmidgeecosse1336 Před 3 lety +19

      I can't add any sources but i do remember my mother saying that the mongols valued the silk shirt because it got entangled in the arrow head and made it EASIER to extract it without causing more damage.

    • @jager6863
      @jager6863 Před 3 lety +20

      Great Video as always, Thanks.
      So a couple of comments, you are correct that a person who survived the arrow or a bullet hit, is better off with a Silk Shirt vs. Linen as the debris from the garment will not collect in the wounds as readily as other material. Very important in the days before antibiotics.
      Secondly, rotation vs penetration is not likely a "Thing" in low velocity projectiles, like arrows. "Modern Arrows" like the APFSDS fired out of tanks, it is a factor. That is why the British 105mm Rifled Gun, was replaced with the German 120mm Smooth-bore Gun. When launching a 6 pound Tungsten or Depleted Uranium Finned Dart at 6,000 Feet per second,.The Smooth-bore gun performs better as no energy is wasted on rotation to stabilize the projectile. Of course it is theoretically less accurate than a rifled gun at 2 kilometres distance, however the target is rather large, usually another tank, so no big deal.
      Finally Teflon coated bullets were used in armor piercing pistol ammunition in the 1970's, notably by the KKW corporation. These were brass bullets coated in Teflon. The reason for the coating was two fold, one to reduce wear on the pistol's barrel, but primarily to help seal the bullet against the rifling, preventing blow-by and aiding engagement with the rifling. Copper jacketed and lead bullets, slightly deform when fired and engage the rifling, whereas hard brass does not.

    • @oisnowy5368
      @oisnowy5368 Před 3 lety +12

      I thought the silk shirt thingie was about getting the barbed arrows out in a less unsettling than normal fashion.

    • @The_Wolf_of_Gar
      @The_Wolf_of_Gar Před 3 lety +12

      Hey Tod for the arrow through the door, another thing to consider is how many times the door has been shot, as perhaps the first or second wont however maybe the 5th or the 10th will have sufficiently weakened the frame to allow for some arrows to penetrate completely

  • @grigorsamsa6564
    @grigorsamsa6564 Před 3 lety +1411

    "I am now gonna pop up from time to time and just give a slightly more balanced, slightly less ranty explanation in certain places".
    Respect. Being able to criticize your own work and its limitations from a different angle is something that not only encourages me to trust your work more, but you yourself as a person.

    • @cali.perhaps
      @cali.perhaps Před 3 lety +42

      underrated comment.

    • @tods_workshop
      @tods_workshop  Před 3 lety +190

      Thank you. I just try to be balanced ands needed to get myself a back a bit more central

    • @ultimoguerreiro82
      @ultimoguerreiro82 Před 3 lety +27

      True maturity and professionalism. Thanks for the comment and the videos. Love from Brazil.

    • @PB4UGAME
      @PB4UGAME Před 3 lety +27

      @@tods_workshop I've watched and been impressed by many of your videos, but this, and the level of professionalism, attention to detail, and the pursuit of truth and honesty shown in it are something else. Very much appreciate you correcting or amending your statements, and striving for a more nuanced and less definitive, or black and white answer. This is the type of quality content I love to subscribe to and support; thank you for your hard work and dedication to accuracy.

    • @ericaugust1501
      @ericaugust1501 Před 3 lety +6

      @@tods_workshop by 'central' i hope you just mean, you'll note more often that these fantastic tests are all very specific to these excellent heavy arrows from a very powerful bow representation. Within these specific test variables/scenarios, by all means you can be pretty confident with a conclusion :)

  • @ChuckUnderFire
    @ChuckUnderFire Před 3 lety +693

    That is probably one of the COOLEST ways of editing opinions, historical reference, and experimental trials that I’ve seen. If only I could do that in real life to dial back my soap box moments.. cheers on your ingenuity.

    • @tods_workshop
      @tods_workshop  Před 3 lety +84

      Thank you - very kind

    • @Sophocles13
      @Sophocles13 Před 3 lety +12

      @@tods_workshop Todd, have you heard of the Samurai-era use of silk standards that would billow behind the rider when he was on horseback? It essentially billows out like a parachute, and is pretty effective as slowing down incoming projectiles much like an airbag slows someones forward momentum. Perhaps the myth had root in some similar such usage? I could definitely see such a silk cape/standard slow incoming arrows to a stop, or enough so that they barely penetrate, in which case pulling them out by the silk gains some credence. I'd love to hear your opinion. Videos of the samurai-era standards being tested against arrows on horseback can be found on youtube. Best regards!

    • @Sophocles13
      @Sophocles13 Před 3 lety +6

      @@tods_workshop after some googling, the Japanese cape was called a Horo. It essentially inflated behind the rider at speed, and was pretty effective at stopping or at the very least slowing arrows down. The video that went into it in depth has been taken down unfortunately, but if you google "horo stops arrows" or something similar, there's lots of interesting content to look into. Maybe you can test this at some point?

    • @skribeworks
      @skribeworks Před 3 lety +10

      It's a Tod's version of a footnote. A Todnote? =)

    • @BlackRabbit223
      @BlackRabbit223 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Sophocles13 I have seen this video. It seems to stop arrows quite well in the situations its used. Mongols used similar tactics, you charge in fire and then turn riding away. The Horo worked for stopping arrows as the rider rode away. It wouldn't work if the horse was stopped or when the rider is charging it.

  • @grishy8203
    @grishy8203 Před 3 lety +294

    This pausing reminds me of the emperors new groove when Cusco pauses to remind the audience that he’s the main character and not pacha

    • @retroicdescent
      @retroicdescent Před 3 lety +17

      Hahaha! Oh man, totally agree. Except that Todd criticizes and tries to tone himself down instead of inflate his ego. Really good comparison, thanks alot!

    • @flyndutchmn
      @flyndutchmn Před 3 lety +5

      @@retroicdescent and that is why i respect his judgement. Yeah, i am more likely to trust him.

    • @elmikeomysterio5496
      @elmikeomysterio5496 Před 3 lety +2

      Great minds...

    • @dorkavenger42
      @dorkavenger42 Před 3 lety +2

      @@flyndutchmn At first I wondered why didn’t he just redo the dialogue so we would not know he had “disagreed” with himself. Then it occurred to me he was also demonstrating the danger of having to be absolutely correct. Acknowledging an error is difficult in real life (and almost impossible online apparently) so I respect his options even more if that’s possible.

  • @army2207
    @army2207 Před 3 lety +13

    I know the constant pausing might be annoying to some people but to me it just shows you that you won't give us a fake reaction and you will show your honest reactions to your experiments. Keep up the great work

  • @eirikronaldfossheim
    @eirikronaldfossheim Před 3 lety +623

    It's Geral de Barri, known as Giraldus Cambrensis, or Geral the Welsh-man. It's an account from 1188 when he wrote about his experience in Wales, named Itinerarium Kambriae.
    It's during the Siege of Abergavenny Castle in 1182. "Two soldiers ran over a bridge to take refuge in one of the Castel towers. Welsh archers, shooting from behind them, drove their arrows into the oak door of the tower with such force that the arrowheads penetrated the wood of the door which was nearly a hand thick; and the arrows were present in that door as a memento."
    Giraldus saw them six years after they had been so effectively shot. A hand is about 4 inches or 100 mm. The correct phrasing is "palmalis fere spissitudinis transpenetrarunt" - "they penetrated nearly the space of a palm. So maybe 3 1/2 inches or 89 mm. My palm is 103 mm across.

    • @tods_workshop
      @tods_workshop  Před 3 lety +164

      Thank you!

    • @Benzy670
      @Benzy670 Před 3 lety +120

      The kind of knowledgeable people I find in Tod’s comment section never ceases to amaze me

    • @adampalamara
      @adampalamara Před 3 lety +41

      Yeah I knew that guy he was always exaggerating. Should have heard him talk about his weiner

    • @ReviewOrcsUSA
      @ReviewOrcsUSA Před 3 lety +40

      "transpenetrarunt" but that means the arrows stick in, not that they went through, right?
      so the myth is a bad translation?

    • @johangamb
      @johangamb Před 3 lety +44

      but does "hand thick" refer to width, length, or depth of a hand ? why choose width ? perhaps in translation/interpretation, it was meant "as thick as a hand", which would only be a few inches as your hand really is only 1-2 inches thick, and is a far more believable statement, given Tod's results.

  • @zerentheunskilled
    @zerentheunskilled Před 3 lety +72

    I'm so happy to see that you are able to call yourself out and correct yourself. It's a lost art, especially here on youtube.

    • @MrDmitriRavenoff
      @MrDmitriRavenoff Před 3 lety

      You mean we aren't all infallible?! Triggered! /s

    • @censordis
      @censordis Před 3 lety

      Dedication to the scientific method.
      Excellent explanation of your observations.

  • @benjaminchng9161
    @benjaminchng9161 Před 3 lety +96

    Watching this is 2020. For a brief moment, I thought "lockdown Long bow" was what Tod called his Long bow during a lockdown.

    • @Saru5000
      @Saru5000 Před 3 lety +6

      It wasn't until this comment I realized that's not what it meant 😂 😂 😂

    • @biteme263
      @biteme263 Před 3 lety +5

      ya, that is what I thought it meant too lol. I thought it was an experiment he was doing during lockdown.

    • @stupidhandles
      @stupidhandles Před 3 lety +6

      Well the video was posted in October 2020
      Lockdown does refer to the lockdown, you bleeding idiots

    • @Saru5000
      @Saru5000 Před 3 lety +5

      @@stupidhandles so much hostility. 😂 😂 😂 Clearly someone is having a bad lockdown

    • @aduboo29
      @aduboo29 Před 2 lety +4

      I mean... it's what he calls his crossbow because he can't bring a longbow archer to his house during lockdown? It is still called the because it was lockdown.

  • @OnlyKaerius
    @OnlyKaerius Před 3 lety +153

    I have a feeling that the Mongol "silk shirts" were more of a gambeson type thing, and they also wore something like scale mail or lamellar armor on top, which would definitely slow the arrows down somewhat. Also this was a defense against barbed arrows, not bodkins.

    • @zeekeno823
      @zeekeno823 Před 3 lety +30

      I remember stories of roman/chinese trade. The romans would unweave the much thicker woven silk and make it into more like the silks we use today. Chances are, despite talking about the Mongols instead of the Chinese, you were correct about it being a thicker garment. Not just by layers, but likely by weave as well

    • @mcewenhandcraft
      @mcewenhandcraft Před 3 lety +8

      also short capes were a thing.. with the bottom of the cape tied to the sadle or the riders waist. it would billow out behind the rider. arrows hitting it would have momentum blunted by that as well..

    • @jeremybarrett3616
      @jeremybarrett3616 Před 3 lety +6

      @@mcewenhandcraft You mean an arrow curtain?

    • @jerkfudgewater147
      @jerkfudgewater147 Před 3 lety +12

      @@zeekeno823 the Mongolians didn’t have much production, most of their “high end” stuff like fancy fabrics came from other peoples... and given that the mongols everyone in the west were facing had already been through china i’m gonna say it’s Chinese silk fabrics they took
      So your general statement is correct and I totally agree with you

    • @sebastian114
      @sebastian114 Před 3 lety +3

      The thing with being hit with an arrow while wearing silk did save lives, mail and proper armor did more but for being protected to having something a fabric that wraps around and a weapoin yeah it did work and it was very damn wonderful. it did work and it did change the battlefields they were part of. but we can look at his ideas of the same stuff, but well... he loves to show off stuff... but its not accurate cause there are so many different things going on.

  • @NotAVeryGoodNickname
    @NotAVeryGoodNickname Před 3 lety +52

    I appreciate how you didn't just cut the mistakes out, but addressed them. Makes you human.

  • @ludecom-cz1wz
    @ludecom-cz1wz Před 3 lety +21

    21 minutes of company time very well spent. Thanks for a bright spot in my day.

    • @tods_workshop
      @tods_workshop  Před 3 lety +10

      My social responsibility and from the perspective of a company owner says I should disapprove - but I don't! Love it and really made me laugh

  • @fritzwilhelm8258
    @fritzwilhelm8258 Před 3 lety +8

    Silk myth: I remember reading that the silk undershirts were worn very loosely in a crumpled fashion. the silk setup you had was a very tight wearing of the silk, which was much more conducive to shock impact penetration.

  • @Just_A_Dude
    @Just_A_Dude Před 3 lety +69

    As someone that's part Welsh, I greatly appreciate someone recognizing the proper origin of the longbow.

    • @lionheart3916
      @lionheart3916 Před 3 lety +4

      Yeah it was welsh in origin but the English was the ones who really utilised it the best by using it in mass formation and making everyone train with it

    • @TurinTuramber
      @TurinTuramber Před 3 lety +2

      Over the course of the millennium since the long bow was invented I would argue that most people in England are "part Welsh".
      Additionally the long bow inventors owe much to the inventors of the common bow.

    • @lionheart3916
      @lionheart3916 Před 3 lety +4

      @@TurinTuramber how did you come to that conclusion?

    • @TurinTuramber
      @TurinTuramber Před 3 lety +1

      @@lionheart3916 "Very simply, if you postulate that 1000 years was 30 generations ago then your theoretical number of ancestors is two to the 30th, or just over a billion: 1,073,741,824"
      If you go back far enough, everyone is related. A millennium ago there were far far far far less people around. The boundary of what is English and what is Welsh would blur into one.

    • @lionheart3916
      @lionheart3916 Před 3 lety +1

      @@TurinTuramber so your saying because the population was far less than today that most of England was welsh? So what about the Germanic migration from the saxons or the Scandinavian influence due to the Dane law and the norman conquest I wouldn't say any of those were welsh

  • @adam-k
    @adam-k Před 3 lety +132

    Lets face it. The mongol arrows worked quite well against the Chinese even when they wore silk. On the other hand I can imagine that there was some kind of Asian gambeson made of silk that worked like a gambeson an got translated as silk "shirt" Just as the medieval Norse called their gambeson as vápntreyja or weapon shirt.

    • @goreobsessed2308
      @goreobsessed2308 Před 3 lety +17

      Pretty much it was layered silk under amor it helped just like a western gambeson but both got shot through regularly

    • @motherkat_reads
      @motherkat_reads Před 3 lety +4

      The Deel, there's one at Royal armouries in Leeds, 4 layers of something closer to habotai, cut on different weave angles and the edges bound, I'd love to see an arrow Vs that.

    • @SlayerofFiction
      @SlayerofFiction Před 3 lety +4

      the silk never stopped the arrow, but rather helped dull the edge to help minimize the damage, it likely was layered, however.
      I am a bit disappointed he missed this. But he also missed the fact the Normans Brought the longbow to the English when William The Conquerer
      Invaded England and took the throne in 1066 after the famous battle of Hastings.
      Entertaining channel and I appreciate what he tries to do, however....

    • @Blackhawck50
      @Blackhawck50 Před 3 lety +1

      It's also worth considering just how loose/much extra fabric in said slik shirt. pulling the fabric nearly taught the arrow will punch right through. perhaps having it looser like on a more flowing silk shirt would be a contributing factor. I think it's a matter of is the shirt strong enough to slow the arrow down and pull more material in with it. - A completely uneducated/scientific thought

    • @ericaugust1501
      @ericaugust1501 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Blackhawck50 i think these arrows are too heavy and bow too powerful for silk. It's more possible silk would help against weaker bows, lighter arrows. So the Mary rose had all these powerful bows in it, and this sunk around 1550, when militaries were getting their most professional and armour was at its peak. I suspect (a guess ofcourse) if we went back 100 years earlier, the typical military soldier was shooting only 120lb. Point is, Todd is really testing the pinnacle of warbow power, and i'm not entirely sure such power is representative of the majority of medieval warfare.

  • @davidaxman
    @davidaxman Před 3 lety +66

    On the drilling myth: Imagine that you are screwing a screw into a piece of wood, you have to apply a certain amount of force to push and rotate it in. Then think about how low a rotational force the arrow has, it is light weight and the rotational speed will never be very high. You also have to keep the rotational force and forwards force constant for a while. The rotational force of the arrow is so much lower the the force forwards. It just makes sense that the arrow won't "drill" in but that it might rotate a bit on impact. My guess is that the rotational force will be dissipated almost as soon as it hits the target. The most penetration will still come from the force forwards.

    • @AliothAncalagon
      @AliothAncalagon Před 3 lety +5

      You can basically clarify this with 5 minutes of simple math.
      The rotational force an arrow can produce is hardly existent.
      But its so much more fun to show it in practice ^^

    • @Hunter30394
      @Hunter30394 Před 3 lety +1

      Not historic, but really interesting to note is the rotation created when using single bevel broadheads. Look up penetration research by Dr. Ed Ashby. Very efficient transfer of forward momentum into rotational force. I have been able to easily and consistently split 1" boards with a 50 lb recurve and 650 grain arrows to simulate bone in a hunting scenario.

    • @maxlutz3674
      @maxlutz3674 Před 3 lety +1

      Most people including some archers do not have an idea about the spin frequency of an arrow. I recall values around 1 rotation per second. Even if it did not loose any rotation on impact, the angle of rotation during penetration would be neglectable. I do not think the the rotation contributes too much to stabilizing the arrow either. The drag of the fletchings may take the brunt of this job.

    • @AliothAncalagon
      @AliothAncalagon Před 3 lety +2

      @@maxlutz3674 The problem with this entire topic is that people often go for how plausible something "sounds".
      Joe achieved around 55m/s with his longbow.
      For an arrow to make any significant rotation in a target under these circumstances it would be required to rotate with more than 60 rotations per second.
      An arrow like this would sound like a flying humming top.
      Let alone the loss of energy of the arrow that would be transformed into rotational energy. Such a design would be inefficient as hell.
      Have I mentioned that you would need the arrowhead to have a rotational geometry to really benefit from such a rotation in the first place?
      Of course its obvious that a straight blade in a drilling machine is bullocks.
      As soon as you think it through.
      As long as you only think "something turning into the target making more damage sounds reasonable" it seems to make sense.

    • @maxlutz3674
      @maxlutz3674 Před 3 lety +6

      @@AliothAncalagon The real problem with this topic is that it does not even have to sound plausible if it is stated by a self-proclaimed expert. Many people are gullible and lack the knowledge to judge so they believe.

  • @Vulgaels
    @Vulgaels Před 3 lety +2

    Edit: from a medical professional and history nerd: i have studied medieval and older medical books and writing, the reality is that the silk Mongol myth is not that it will pull the arrow easily, but that the wound will be cleaner. Meaning no fabric in the wound that will lead to infection. The other myth is the capes the horse archers used, which will deviate the arrow and reduce the spinning action and there for causing smaller wound. Maybe have a fan blowing at a big peace of cape and shoot at it? On the silk again the silk was worn under armour, maybe it made then the removal easier or just kept the wound cleaner.
    Thank you! I was the one who requested silk cape or shirts! Thank you so much for testing it.

    • @DreadX10
      @DreadX10 Před 3 lety +1

      The billowing capes were tested that way and they seemed to work. Some arrows had their heads entangled in the silk but didn't hit the body.

    • @Vulgaels
      @Vulgaels Před 3 lety

      @@DreadX10 got a video of that?

  • @dennisamelunxen8283
    @dennisamelunxen8283 Před 3 lety +47

    Even if they spin like crazy, arrows don't have enough inertia for the spin to have any "drilling" effect. Simple physics, man.

    • @tods_workshop
      @tods_workshop  Před 3 lety +20

      absolutely

    • @bluelionsage99
      @bluelionsage99 Před 3 lety +2

      Plus flathead arrows or those cross shaped cross section modern hunting arrows would not work if the arrow was spinning anything close to bullet fast.

    • @yareyare_dechi
      @yareyare_dechi Před 3 lety

      even without the camera you can tell by the hole it makes. if it did drill the hole would be round and you dont see many round holes from a broad head or a bodkin etc, so how people got to this i dont know.

    • @sebastianriz4703
      @sebastianriz4703 Před 3 lety

      you forget this is the internet. Where all basement trolls are experts on subjects while all of them forgetting about nature's laws that proove then wrong everytime

    • @allenl5960
      @allenl5960 Před 3 lety

      @@yareyare_dechi
      It's not quite similar, but I have seen several light novels/manga/comics/fanfics/etc that seem to think that any attack, particularly projectile attacks, would get stronger if the attack also spun around like a drill. The general idea seems to be that a spin would somehow put more 'force' into the attack.
      I'm not 100% where this idea came from or how it got popular, but from what I can tell(with minimal research mind you), the basic idea seems to come from bullets.
      Basically, someone heard about guns having rifling for gyroscopic stabilization, but didn't really get the idea of gyroscopic stabilization, so came away with the very basic idea of 'projectile+spin=better'. People thought it made enough sense I guess, because it didn't take long for 'make it spin' became kind of a go-to method for upgrading an attack after the first spinny attacks started coming out.
      It used to be rather common a few years back, but seems to have lost popularity for the most part.
      .
      As a side note, even if we ignored the lack of inertia and 'definitely not drilled' holes, there's also the fact that most arrowheads are very clearly not designed with drilling into anything in mind. How anyone would see a broadhead and go 'yep, that looks like it's supposed to drill into things', I've no idea.

  • @gelgamath_9903
    @gelgamath_9903 Před 3 lety +89

    I thought the silk shirt myth was about wearing a silk shirt your under armor. So if only the tip of the arrow passes through it will be wrapped in silk prevent it from infecting the wound

    • @Chasmodius
      @Chasmodius Před 3 lety +8

      Is an arrowhead likely to be "dirtier" (from a microbiological perspective) than a shirt against your skin? Maybe if your enemies are jerks and wiping their arrowheads with feces. Or if the archer stuck the arrow in the ground before firing?

    • @patrickdix772
      @patrickdix772 Před 3 lety +18

      I've personally heard 2 versions of the silk shirt myth, only 1 having to do with the wounds. The idea that I heard was that the silk shirt was less likely to leave fibers in the wound, which is a common cause if infection. I also have heard if it wrapping the arrows as well, but never really believed that part. The other silk vs arrow myth I heard was of early samurai wearing silk capes to disrupt to arrow flight before it would actually strike flesh or armor.

    • @Soridan
      @Soridan Před 3 lety +9

      @@patrickdix772 the samurai "myth" was shown to work here on CZcams. Memory wants me to say it was this channel but I might be mixing that part up.

    • @patrickdix772
      @patrickdix772 Před 3 lety

      @@Soridan I haven't watched all the videos on the channel (mostly not all the old shoots an x), so if it's not in the title of the video I don't seen one about arrows vs a cape here. I did a quick scan through of the video titles to check, and honestly haven't done any real research on it, just remembered hearing it somewhere.

    • @Soridan
      @Soridan Před 3 lety +4

      @@patrickdix772 Yeah, funny that, I can't find it now. Definitely saw the video though, the guy riding around had multiple arrows shot at him and each arrow's flight path was sufficiently disturbed by the horo (the silk cape inflated by air) that their effectiveness was vastly reduced and mostly they smacked sideways into him.

  • @ABAlphaBeta
    @ABAlphaBeta Před 3 lety +83

    Turnbull, Stephen. (2003). Mongol Warrior 1200 - 1500. Osprey Publishing, Oxford. Mentions this, couldn't find much before that but given how widespread the idea is, I doubt it's just Osprey (Silk Roads author Dr Frankopan mentions it). I think it comes from a misunderstanding of the qualities of silk - of course it gets pierced, but the hole is clean without having shredded wool wires inside your body afterwards, and the arrow penetrates more cleanly since it just goes straight through the silk.

    • @CarlosRodriguez-dd4sb
      @CarlosRodriguez-dd4sb Před 3 lety +17

      Perhaps it's more about not dragging a bunch of material into the wound that would cause infection?

    • @tods_workshop
      @tods_workshop  Před 3 lety +16

      Thanks

    • @tomalong99
      @tomalong99 Před 3 lety +2

      We also have to take into account that the Mongolian would ideally be wearing armour of some description, typical for a Mongolian ether iron or rawhide lamellar and a padded garment underneath rather than just a silk shirt. That being said linen is also rather strong and I do not think we have any account from elsewhere of being able to pull out an arrow from a linen shirt.
      Ultimately there are probable too many variables to work with, arrow head, arrow weight, velocity, type or armour worn etc. to conclude in a single video.

    • @konzetsu6068
      @konzetsu6068 Před 3 lety +1

      Lighter arrows, armour and loose silk shirt might still be plausible, I’ve also heard somewhere that silk is supposed to have much higher tensile strength when wet, so, how much did mongols sweat? ;)

    • @thegurem
      @thegurem Před 3 lety

      @@konzetsu6068 well, on horseback in a battle, I'd guess rather copiously is the answer

  • @Nobody.Important000
    @Nobody.Important000 Před 3 lety +6

    Can i just say, the whole "hey guys, just so you know, i was being a bit dumb about things- I'ma come in and call myself out a few times, sorry." is- kind of amazing. The fact that you're willing to call yourself out- when- to be honest, not a lot of people do- nice going man.

    • @pRahvi0
      @pRahvi0 Před 3 lety

      Calling oneself out on occasions should be a thing

  • @Afridge2far
    @Afridge2far Před 2 lety +2

    This is one of the best clips i've watched on YT. Love love love the interventions and the smoothing of the waters. The world needs more of this across the board. Bravo.

  • @sitrilko
    @sitrilko Před 3 lety +72

    Take into account that a silk shirt (or armor? gambison-esque?) would've been used in conjuction with actual armor, be it chain, lamellar, etc.
    Those would be the primary detract of the arrow's power. So the question would be if the arrow went only slightly in - would the silk shirt do what the myth says?
    Or perhaps, would a silk gambison behave differently (in general) than a, for example, linen one? Now that's an interesting notion to test.

    • @tods_workshop
      @tods_workshop  Před 3 lety +34

      I simply don't know the basis of the myth, but I would imagine that silk gambesons would work very well

    • @Acer81996
      @Acer81996 Před 3 lety +1

      @@tods_workshop I suppose a more suitable test would be a bodkin against a medium carbon steel plate backed by layered silk/paper.

    • @blakexu4943
      @blakexu4943 Před 3 lety +8

      I would like to add that silk is also flame resistant. So there's a benefit to that in accordance with the sort of weaponry that the mongols might've faced?

    • @Zajuts149
      @Zajuts149 Před 3 lety +7

      @@tods_workshop From what I can remember, the Mongols got a lot of silk when they raided China in 1211. Since they shared spoils equally, every soldier would have been given silk, so that if one could make a shirt of it, they all could. I don't know if they had enough to make gambesons. As I understand it, the idea was not to pull out the arrow WITH(by) the silk, but pull it out with(together with) the silk. The silk supposedly prevented barbs from eating into the flesh, and so made them easier to pull out without further injury. Even so, a silk undershirt must be comfortable to wear, and would prevent chafing when riding on horseback for days and weeks.

    • @pmk198908
      @pmk198908 Před 3 lety +5

      Very possibly once you start layering and orienting material that’s where you can start to some strange results for a material science standpoint.

  • @michaelspeakman9734
    @michaelspeakman9734 Před 3 lety +53

    i thought on the Mongolian war garments it was armor over a multi layered silk kaftan.

    • @goreobsessed2308
      @goreobsessed2308 Před 3 lety +9

      It is and both the layers and armor help slow the arrows.

    • @albertonishiyama1980
      @albertonishiyama1980 Před 3 lety +7

      Also most of the legends about Silk are about when its wet.
      What wasnt dificult since the mongols where traveling hours untill Battle, so their own swet would do the job.

    • @bcary461
      @bcary461 Před 3 lety +9

      This has been tested by another chanel and it was evident that the silk undershirt worn beneath a layer of armor does provide a great benefit

    • @DreadX10
      @DreadX10 Před 3 lety +3

      Am still confused why the mongols shot themselves....
      Todd refers to Mongolian arrows when talking about the silk myth.

    • @mllhild
      @mllhild Před 3 lety +8

      @@DreadX10 Because they were a bunch of tribes that constantly waged war on themselfs as well as with anyone around them. Its not like they were a united entity.

  • @theinqov
    @theinqov Před 3 lety +1

    A better indication that arrows don't drill into targets is that the arrows don't have drill bits as their heads.
    These videos are brilliant, the way you analyse everything and give the footage along with the conclusions are brilliant.

  • @eliasmccollum5581
    @eliasmccollum5581 Před 2 lety

    It doesn't take a physics degree to know that an arrow or bolt doesn't drill itself into the target. The function of the fletching causing the arrow to spin is simply to stabilize the flight of the arrow. I knew the answer before you did the test, but I also understand that some people don't have the experience or have not yet aquired a knowledge of ballistics. This was a great educational video for those who didn't previously have that knowledge. We all had to learn this at some point and were without that knowledge prior to the time we learned.
    I really enjoyed your test to see if an arrow could shoot through a plank door. All your videos are great and I appreciate you taking the time to share your knowledge. I am looking forward to building my own hunting crossbow. Your build video was fantastic! Thank you, Sir.

  • @gregsturgeon6497
    @gregsturgeon6497 Před rokem +3

    Sir, your videos have taught me so much more than I thought I already knew. Please keep up the great work

  • @klarsen1042
    @klarsen1042 Před 3 lety +6

    The silk shirt thing seems almost self-explanatory. Even if we imagine for a moment that Mongolian silk was so absurdly durable that the arrow would not in fact tear through it but rather push the fabric into the body, the shirt would have to be so loose (or exceedingly elastic, which we know it wouldn't have been) that you can push the garment several inches into the body without tightening it enough that the arrowhead will puncture it. They'd have to have been wearing XXXXXL shirts.
    If you wrap some cloth around a leg of lamb at roughly the same "tightness" as a shirt typically sits on a human body, and push your finger into it, you don't get very far before you begin to meet resistance. The arrowhead would tear right through the fabric as soon as any kind of resistance is met.

  • @thomaswalsh4552
    @thomaswalsh4552 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I appreciate the stepping back and recognizing one’s possible mistakes

  • @MrDmitriRavenoff
    @MrDmitriRavenoff Před 3 lety +2

    I find the wood penetration test interesting. I'm more of a firearms guy and I remember a test for Acceptable Military Calibers. It was a penetration test using a 3/4" (18mm) pine board.
    Turned out even the lowly 22 caliber could pass that benchmark.
    Super fun to see your arrows splitting kindling.

  • @patrickgrounds2157
    @patrickgrounds2157 Před 3 lety +23

    Undressed silk is a lot thicker and stiffer then fine slik and was worn in several. Similar in concept to a Gambeson.

    • @marz6770
      @marz6770 Před 3 lety

      However, it's likely (if the shot has enough power to penetrate the flesh), that it will slice between the fiber rather than "pushing" the silk to create a wound. I guess it needs another experiment, but if the silk fibers are tight and strong enough (or if the arrow is not too sharpened), it would certainly only bruise the wearer.

    • @TheGreatPower365
      @TheGreatPower365 Před 3 lety +4

      @@marz6770 the idea was it would let you pull the arrow out of a wound. I think the issue here is the bow and arrows used (as Tod mentions) and the type and thickness of silk as he and others here have alluded to- but also I expect there was armor involved as well (leather at the very least). In a situation where the arrows were only able to penetrate a short distance (say an inch) I can imagine thick silk might get bound up enough to then be pulled out by tugging on the surrounding silk.
      At any rate, recurve bows were massively less powerful than the beast Tod is shooting here.

  • @thomashunter9758
    @thomashunter9758 Před 3 lety +6

    Commentary was well done. Obvious you take pride in your vids. Thanks for everything you do!

  • @rat488
    @rat488 Před 2 lety +2

    Todd that silk test reminds me of a bit of kit some samurai wore which was a cape that would inflate like a balloon at speed due to drag which was proposed to stop arrows. On the history channel they showed that as effective but as we all know that can be a quite unreliable source at times and I think it would be interesting to test up to what poundage that armor was effective for. Just an idea for that silk armor video coming down the pipe.

  • @soldierbreakneck771
    @soldierbreakneck771 Před 3 lety +2

    One of the most interesting medieval warfare/craft channels on entire CZcams. Thank you, Tod, a lot. Really love your videos.

  • @jaybeam1466
    @jaybeam1466 Před 2 lety +3

    I think you should have only done one shot. You're putting a lot more pressure on the silk when you pulling on 3 arrows. I'm not sure if it would have made a difference, but it's worth considering. Most people aren't going to get shot 3 times in the same location before finally deciding to find cover :D

  • @bhunterbmw335is2
    @bhunterbmw335is2 Před 3 lety +35

    If I shad to guess about the oak door story I would’ve bet anything they meant exactly what we saw here. Some guys in a castle with a thick oak door started seeing longbow arrows start poking through the door a few inches and probably thought huh ok shit. That arrow actually poked its way through the door. Not sailed through

    • @Secret_Moon
      @Secret_Moon Před 3 lety +7

      I actually think there was some truth in that myth, and it all comes down to how tight the plank was framed on the side. Like we saw in the first few tests with unframed planks, the arrows easily split the planks apart. So in case the plank wasn't held tight on the side, like with some cheap carts or doors that had some gaps between the planks, an arrow could very well split a plank and went right through it.

    • @Seelenschmiede
      @Seelenschmiede Před 3 lety +2

      @@Secret_Moon A normal hut door could / would break down by arrow fire, but a reinforced castle door? I thins they are a) way to thick and b) are reinforced good enough for this not to happen.

    • @Secret_Moon
      @Secret_Moon Před 3 lety +1

      @@Seelenschmiede Yes, I did say only with cheap doors and carts with gaps between the planks that this thing might have happened.
      Also, I think the deciding factor is not how thick the planks were but how big the gaps between the planks were. We saw in the test that oak planks are very easy to be split if nothing holds them together. If there is a gap the size of the arrow diameter between the planks, the arrow can easily crack and push the two half of the plank apart to fly through.

    • @Seelenschmiede
      @Seelenschmiede Před 3 lety +1

      @@Secret_Moon why should there be gaps? Medievil craftsman were very good in their jobs. So when you can interlocking planks today, they could make them too. Is this the modern viewpoint of "everything in the medievil time was shoddy and badly crafted"?
      Maybe an old cart, after decades of use got rattly loose planks with gabs in between, but who would use it and why would a longbow archer attack this person?
      Yes, wood works when it ages, but there is a thing called maintenance. Especially for high risk structures like castle doors.

    • @nicholashodges201
      @nicholashodges201 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Seelenschmiede wood shrinks as it ages. After twenty years of good care even the best crafted wood items start to get a bit wobbly.

  • @Torgall
    @Torgall Před 3 lety

    Correcting yourself and avoiding the broad generalized statements is one of the reasons why I love this channel.

  • @lloydparker4799
    @lloydparker4799 Před 3 lety +2

    Tod, I think most medieval boards were riven, not sawn. A riven board is split on the quarter and denser than a modern flat sawn board like you used in your test. Also, the longer the board the more difficult it will be for the arrow to split. Love your your work and the way you explore historic problems!

  • @CarlGGHamilton
    @CarlGGHamilton Před 3 lety +7

    Dear Tod, I seem to remember something about silk shirts and vikings from my country Denmark, where this myth is also said. I am fairly convinced that the silk shirt, is more like a silk hauberk, or rather a gambeson. I hope you'll consider doing the test with several layers of silk like in a gambeson, with every layer having alternating grains. I think this will make a big difference.

    • @joejoeington6899
      @joejoeington6899 Před 2 lety

      Is there any difference between that and a normal gamberson

    • @megathicc6367
      @megathicc6367 Před rokem +2

      Also knight surcoats often was made of silk that was layered to some extent. Its wasn't gambeson thick but it was a few layers. That and middle eastern cultures and byzantines used silk on the battlefield it just wasn't used by its self.

  • @HistoricalWeapons
    @HistoricalWeapons Před 3 lety +76

    Hi Todd I would be interested to do testing with my asian warbows, where do you recommend getting reasonable price armour that is still historical?

    • @siberiaacoustic
      @siberiaacoustic Před 3 lety

      ebay

    • @Dnahwjjwjejnenex
      @Dnahwjjwjejnenex Před 3 lety +3

      maybe go to a medieval club and ask them

    • @louisvictor3473
      @louisvictor3473 Před 3 lety +12

      I would suggest asking around in collector forums, reenactors with a more historical flair, etc. for "broken" stuff so you can test. Make the purpose clear. Say for example you get some mail that tore in half. Sure, ain't no good to be worn anymore, but that mail "fabric" is still plenty good to be shot at and get the same results you'd if it was in a whole shirt. And the owner might be much more willing to part ways with it for a lower price than something new or in good shape. Don't get your hopes up, but if you point out you're doing tests, you might even get a couple of freebies now and then.

    • @xiaotian5863
      @xiaotian5863 Před 3 lety

      @@louisvictor3473 why not make ur own

    • @louisvictor3473
      @louisvictor3473 Před 3 lety +11

      @@xiaotian5863 He said historically accurately, not "Joe on the street thinks any two pieces of metal that just looks the part are all the same thing" levels of accuracy. Unless you've specialize on this, you can't just put a bunch of off the shelf metal together and call it historical accurate armor, and you won't become a specialized armorer overnight, in a month, or in a year.

  • @LarryGarfieldCrell
    @LarryGarfieldCrell Před 3 lety +1

    Mad respect for someone that can call himself to task publicly like that. It's that sort of maturity that lends credence to the rest of your work; if you haven't called yourself out for it, we can be more confident that your research and conclusions are sound.
    Nice work Todd and Interjecting Todd!

  • @mattjax5207
    @mattjax5207 Před 3 lety

    1.19 minutes. Bravo Bravo. Love your honesty and love your attitude. Its why i come back time and time again. Great integrity.

  • @rileyelder1048
    @rileyelder1048 Před 3 lety +16

    Hey Tom, I really appreciate your commitment to accuracy and fairly representing your findings. It is very tempting to be sensational and overestimate your confidence on this platform, and indeed it is heavily incentivized. It takes a lot of courage to step back decide you've been a little too confident in your claims, and I greatly respect the scholarly environment you do so well to cultivate on this channel. Thanks, and keep up the good work!

  • @Saintphoenix86
    @Saintphoenix86 Před 3 lety +6

    So much respect for you interrupting yourself in this, so many people wouldn't have bothered and just sent it out as is

  • @zweispurmopped
    @zweispurmopped Před rokem

    Your rants made perfect sense. The one trick used to stop arrows with silk was the silken sail attached to the backs of riding warriors at the shoulders and hips with enough extra length to form a bubble behind the rider, a bit like a spinnaker sail. Such sail will flap left to right vigorously in the turbulence behind the rider's back. The lateral motion of the sail could draw the tip of the arrow away from the arrow's trajectory. As the real impulse of the arrow is carried at its centre of mass, the COG, the arrow head is no longer really where the arrow delivers its punch to push into the target. Moreover air is not massless. As the arrow is made go sideways more and more by the flapping sail, it more and more delivers its punch to the silk. The sail is deformed and thus needs to displace air trapped under it. This volume of air easily has hundreds of Gramms. This mass of air serves as shock absorber! I think it was on a programme with Mike Loades where they demonstrated this principle works pretty reliably.

  • @guimourap704
    @guimourap704 Před 2 lety

    This is just a perfect example of balance between empiricism and rationalism. The "little interventions" that corrected certain adamant statements as rational deductions ("maybe on other scenarios and with other materials this might work") balace out the empirical experiments ("let's test it out and see"). I kinda got here by accident but watched the video to the end and I am amazed by how the interventions were so on-point that turned this into a lesson of knowing one's own limitations and striving to make what you do in the best way you can. This guy has become an inspiration to me.

  • @nedwardmumford7525
    @nedwardmumford7525 Před 3 lety +60

    Wouldn’t they have worn the silk underneath their armour as well? Just as a sort of last line? Rather than just the silk? Could be worth trying.
    Great video!

    • @lach_im7322
      @lach_im7322 Před 3 lety +9

      They and meny other eastern nation's wore meny, meny layes of silk as armour, it worked against swords but I'm not sure about the arrows. The first bulletproof vest make by Jan Szczepanik, was of silk.

    • @emilychb6621
      @emilychb6621 Před 3 lety +8

      Plus He did show one huge advantage of those silk cloths: The fibers didn't get pulled into the wound.
      Which should be an improvement over wool or linen fibers getting into the wound.
      Not to mention that arrow stops work by having a cloth hanging lose from a wire.
      If you wear loads of lose flowering silk clothes, the arrow will be decelerated before it reaches the body.
      Just like with a modern arrow stop barrier.
      If you place that in front of a target, even target pointed arrows will just punch through it as well.

    • @wadekirby8575
      @wadekirby8575 Před 3 lety +2

      I heard a silk shirt was worn under chainmail for the effect Tod described.

    • @jakedee4117
      @jakedee4117 Před 3 lety

      Can't beat silk knickers, just sayin'

    • @TheGreatPower365
      @TheGreatPower365 Před 3 lety

      @@wadekirby8575 that would make sense to me. If only the tip of the arrow is getting through, then the silk would probably prove useful in getting the arrow out.

  • @thundercactus
    @thundercactus Před 3 lety +27

    The thing about DRILLING is that it's a very LOW forward velocity, and a very high rpm, in order to minimize chip thickness. Certainly there are drills and material combinations that allow much faster forward movement for the same rpm, but as a general rule; the rpm required for drilling is a VASTLY larger number than the forward velocity.
    So are ANY arrows, modern or medieval, drilling into targets? Definitively, no. And as a machinist I don't feel any doubt what so ever in that answer.
    Is an arrow TWISTING inside a target? In some cases like armor strikes (where armor is usually quite thin >20mm), not enough to matter. In cases of going through a body or especially game, yes it's absolutely twisting as it goes through.
    But TWISTING is not the same as DRILLING. The act of the the arrow twisting doesn't actually increase it's ability to penetrate.
    In fact, an argument could tenuously be made that because a twisting arrow has to travel through more linear material through the body of say a deer, it's actually reducing the amount of penetration.
    So then, COULD an arrow be made to DRILL through a target? Well, not really, no.
    The thing about drilling is it invariably takes time to do. So at the very extreme end of design, you'd need an arrow spinning at thousands of rpm, with a spring resisted weight system inside the shaft so the arrow could actually maintain a pressure against a target while it was drilling into it. But here's the catch that makes it impossible: you also need to stabilize that force 100% absolutely directly perpendicular, or the arrow destabilizes in drilling and just flings off in a random direction.
    If anyone has any doubt that an arrow ISN'T drilling into a target, then imagine this scenario: A drill chuck with a drill is spinning 2000rpm in a drill press. That chuck falls out of the quill onto a workpiece, and for sake of exaggeration lets say the table isn't in place and the workpiece is on the floor. How far into the workpiece is that drill going to make it before it falls to the side?
    It's going to make a dent, and that's about it.

    • @tods_workshop
      @tods_workshop  Před 3 lety +10

      A great analysis - thank you

    • @benedict6962
      @benedict6962 Před 3 lety +9

      clearly we need rocket propelled arrows that spin into the target.
      ...this is totally still classified as an arrow.

    • @mjfleming319
      @mjfleming319 Před 3 lety

      Great comment. My question now is does the arrow twist enough in the target to create appreciably more tissue damage?

    • @wolja
      @wolja Před 3 lety

      @@mjfleming319 Logically only if your close enough for friction to have not reduced the spin before it hits the target. But still the rotation would have to be much higher than was apparent to me

    • @zetanax1041
      @zetanax1041 Před 3 lety

      hmmm, quite interesting
      do you think it would be possible to have a fletching style that would increase the rpm of an arrow?
      I was also curious if some form of 'propeller-bladed arrowhead' could increase rotation?

  • @45calibermedic
    @45calibermedic Před 3 lety +1

    Hey Tod, very enjoyable video. Thanks for taking the time not only to make it but to add the extra commentary. Your good intentions definitely come across and confirm what we already thought: that you're a likeable guy. Cheers.

  • @punkrockviking
    @punkrockviking Před 2 lety

    I appreciate a creator who can critique his own video like this. Well done.

  • @osu45d
    @osu45d Před 3 lety +92

    wonder what Tod's wife thinks about him shooting the Sunday roast...

  • @Katniss218
    @Katniss218 Před 3 lety +6

    Huge respect for being able to correct yourself in the video :D

  • @eriolduterion8855
    @eriolduterion8855 Před 2 lety +1

    As far as the oak penetration is concerned: in addition to the piece of oak that the arrow head obviously pierced, you had a backstop target board that also obviously kept the arrow from penetrating deeper. I would suggest taping the "framed" oak to a cardboard box and see how much penetration one gets.
    I believe the History Channel on TV did a "quilted gambeson style silk shirt" test some years ago that showed that with the typical light Mongol arrows fired from the typical Mongol horn recurve bow, that the silk was effective in reducing the penetration, helped stop possible bleeding, and could assist in the removal of an arrow. (Your mileage may vary!)

  • @ZG0002
    @ZG0002 Před 3 lety +2

    We all have our off days (especially in recent times!) I'm new to your content but have to say it is brilliant and this video goes to show why, you watched and pulled yourself up on something. Self awareness is a great attribute to have in life and someone of us struggle with it.
    Keep up the great content (must be tough with our lockdowns) can't wait for you to get back with a bit of a team doing tests, that's no criticism of you but that wealth of knowledge in a youtube video was striking 👍

  • @jrk1666
    @jrk1666 Před 3 lety +105

    the selling point of silk is that it doesn't rip apart and gets inside of the wound like other fabrics

    • @pmk198908
      @pmk198908 Před 3 lety +13

      If that’s why your buying silk may i interest you in Kevlar or other aramids

    • @ScowlerJase
      @ScowlerJase Před 3 lety +16

      This was my understanding too - its not about stopping the arrow or easing its removal , its to prevent infection after by not having fragments of leather/sackcloth left in the body.

    • @xTh3be5tx
      @xTh3be5tx Před 3 lety +6

      @@pmk198908 I think using silk is not necessarily a bad idea. You could say that silk is a 'natural Kevlar' . At least chemically both are liquid crystals with similar properties.

    • @pmk198908
      @pmk198908 Před 3 lety +6

      @@xTh3be5tx one of them is regularly used in bullet-resistance applications, the other isn’t. This was a stupid myth that at best got misinterpreted over the centuries and at was worst was pseudoscience bullshit. I’m glad we’re finally putting it to bed

    • @klegdixal3529
      @klegdixal3529 Před 3 lety +18

      @@pmk198908 just making sure that you do understand bulletproof vests were made of layered silk before invention of aramids. and were prohibitively expensive.

  • @mjfleming319
    @mjfleming319 Před 3 lety +32

    I’d love to see politicians fact-check their own speeches this way!

  • @garryjones1847
    @garryjones1847 Před 3 lety

    Great show! Love your candid honesty
    and great care for historical accuracy!

  • @blade123204
    @blade123204 Před rokem

    Props to you on coming back thu and clarifying your meaning and points certainly helps to understand

  • @grigorsamsa6564
    @grigorsamsa6564 Před 3 lety +9

    Regarding English vs. Mongol war bows and arrows: Mongol composite bows were roughly the same poundage, but because of their design, were slightly more efficient at transferring their energy to the arrow. As regards a lighter arrow, I'd expect a thinner, faster arrow to also penetrate further through cloth, so that shouldn't affect the results too much.
    As for the silk, I'd imagine they would be worn underneath other armour or even just heavy clothing, since the steppes do get rather chilly. Maybe in other circumstances, as you mentioned- long distance hits, weak bows, weak shots- the silk might be enough to make the difference between a flesh wound and a bleeding gut. Perhaps that would make for a fun series of tests!
    On the subject of rotation, another CZcams channel, Taofledermaus does a lot of work with high speed projectiles, and rotation is one of the things they examine. I wonder how similar the techniques are between wood and lead.
    And finally, on shooting legs of lamb! Another of the channels I watch, Paul Harrell, does his shooting on the patented Meat Target: a chop / steak for the pectoral, a slab of ribs on the front, a bag of oranges to simulate lung tissue, and then another slab of ribs on the back. That would be a great test to see with medieval weapons! Not just bow and arrow, but sword, mace, and so on.
    Cheers for another great video. Love the channel and your work.

    • @meanczechguy1043
      @meanczechguy1043 Před 3 lety +5

      I would be careful about the claim with same poundage, there are very few found horse bows with higher draw weight than 100lbs (even that is nice feat, considering it was used from a horseback), most of sources found online are more like opinions, even say fanboy claims (average draw weight being of 160 pounds, IMMENSELY better transfer of power and so on), than something based on a fact - sometimes bordering the famous jokes of katanas cutting space and time (but this is of course found even on side of long bows, turkish/ottoman bows and so on)

    • @Robert399
      @Robert399 Před 3 lety

      But they were also significantly shorter so the same poundage transfers less energy to the arrow (because it imparts the force for less distance/time/same thing).

    • @pRahvi0
      @pRahvi0 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Robert399 You have a point, but Mongol bows were recurve bows whose _draw length_ (which is the meaningful variable for energy) is greater than that of an equally long straight bow. On the other hand, the force in recurve bows is non-linear so the comparison is even more difficult.

    • @dempa3
      @dempa3 Před 3 lety

      Why oranges and not buying some sheep lung from the butcher?

    • @Ahmazzan
      @Ahmazzan Před 3 lety +1

      @@dempa3 Specifically for the Paul Harrel example, I think it's a mix of a) not wanting to leave bits of bloodied, pulverised lung tissue everywhere (at least with oranges things just get a bit sticky) and b) especially with the pandemic he (Paul) has said he's had problems even acquiring his usual cuts of meat and has had to alter the materials now and then. Much like Tod though he is very upfront about the limits of the conclusions that can be drawn from his work.

  • @peterleffler2062
    @peterleffler2062 Před 3 lety

    Tod, total respect for your 'self peer reviewing'. The adamant sweeping statement is a trap it must be easy to fall into if you do your type of video and subject matter but you pulled it back from the edge of the slippery slope.

  • @natetully287
    @natetully287 Před 3 lety

    I love your honesty, Tod! Your videos are amazing! Please keep up the good work!

  • @pirobot668beta
    @pirobot668beta Před 3 lety +16

    "Drilling into the target"
    "Spinning causes more damage than the impact"
    "Spinning bullets penetrate deeper"
    "Hollow point bullets are buzz-saws inside the body"
    "If the bullet doesn't spin, it can't penetrate the target."
    ...
    Every one of these 'truths' about spinning bullets/arrows/spears have been refuted the same way: slow-motion films.
    Yes, a bullet spins in flight, around one rotation per 18" of flight on average for rifles, one in 9" for pistols.
    If your soft target is two feet thick, that 'Devil Bullet' is going to spin about twice as it passes through.
    Hardly a buzz-saw or a drill, those two rotations...

    • @shorewall
      @shorewall Před 3 lety +3

      Man, if we started talking about guns, we'd never run out of myths. :D

    • @seirbhiseach
      @seirbhiseach Před 3 lety +3

      The fuddlore gave me 'nam flashbacks

    • @firstnamelastname7003
      @firstnamelastname7003 Před 3 lety

      Only contention I have with this analysis is that we don't know whether the rotational momentum decreases at the same proportional rate as the linear momentum. In fact I should imagine it doesn't as the only thing stopping the bullet rotating is friction along the surface rather than impact with a target for the linear momentum (although admittedly the friction would be very high given it scales linearly with the normal force, or the force acting to arrest the bullet). So, as the bullet slows down linearly, we might expect it to still be rotating relatively quickly and the number of rotations per cm to increase, possibly quite significantly.

  • @Dreoni_
    @Dreoni_ Před 3 lety +3

    I really appreciate the honesty Tod, you could have uploaded the unrevised video but you took the effort to fix it. Thanks for that, you have my utmost respect.

  • @Kheldul
    @Kheldul Před 3 lety

    I love how you dealt with your editing. Great approach!

  • @EeekiE
    @EeekiE Před rokem

    Love how you approached the final edit on this video. A massive amount of integrity and honesty shown.

  • @Benzy670
    @Benzy670 Před 3 lety +3

    The way you handle being dissatisfied with your own content is top-notch, Tod. There are many creators that would just push out the content because it’s, “good enough”. You strive to be as accurate and knowledgeable as possible to put out the best content possible. You’re honest with yourself and us, your audience, which is why so many of us respect and trust you. Great stuff as usual, my man!

  • @wittsullivan8130
    @wittsullivan8130 Před 3 lety +8

    Even bullets don't drill into targets, they don't weigh enough to overcome the friction when they hit the target.

  • @Asgar1205
    @Asgar1205 Před 3 lety

    i'm so glad he "fixed" the door test. while watching i was like... that piece of wood is too small it just gets split, a door wouldn't ... just then: in come the frame. Thanks Tod, that's the quality of testing i've gotten used to expect from your videos!

  • @paulmears5330
    @paulmears5330 Před 4 měsíci

    These physical demonstrations, however limited, are worth so much more than any amount of knowledgeable speculation.
    Well done!

  • @mikegould6590
    @mikegould6590 Před 3 lety +4

    I would consider the "silk shirt" test with leather/lamellar armor over the silk, and an accurate weight/style bow and arrow. Otherwise, the test itself is discounted. Silk was the last line of defense (in theory), not the first.

  • @jingojango9220
    @jingojango9220 Před 3 lety +8

    Hi Tod,
    I actually know where the door story comes from. There was a chronicle on the English's wars in Wales, and an account of a skirmish between the English and Welsh: 'Two soldiers ran over a bridge to take refuge in one of the Casde towers. Welsh
    archers, shooting from behind them, drove their arrows into the oak door of the
    tower with such force that the arrowheads penetrated the wood of the door which
    was nearly a hand thick; and the arrows were preserved in that door as a memento.'
    You can find more info and a specific source in the book "Longbow: a social and military history" (pg36)

    • @SepticFuddy
      @SepticFuddy Před 3 lety +1

      If they're just "penetrating", which I interpret as the points sticking out the backside, and multiple archers are firing, then I could believe that. The wood would give more and more with each arrow.

  • @robk2739
    @robk2739 Před 3 lety +1

    I feel like the oak wood myth is only partially served here. Love what you've done!
    On the oak myth, doors, top wood plank framing a wagons bed, aren't 100% framed. For example, a door may be fully framed if closed, though it is gapped to a degree between it's framing. Some doors, swinging doors, may not be framed at all top and bottom. Very in between examples of unframed and fully framed.
    Wagons, the side walls of a wagon usually only go so high. The top board on the side wall of the wagon would have no bracing on the top side. Possibly no bracing on the bottom side depending on if there's full board gaps between the top board and the next board below. Sometimes a full boards width gap exists. Curious.

  • @HydroMaester
    @HydroMaester Před 3 lety

    My favorite channel on these types of topics!

  • @apstrike
    @apstrike Před 3 lety +9

    This was a perfectly fine video even without the clarifying edits. No rants here. I have not studied physics in 30 years, but can't you pretty much rule out the possibility of spinning? Yes the arrow is going to spin in flight, but it only has its own weight to give it angular momentum, and the angular momentum imparted by the fletchings doesn't seem significant when the arrow is turning inside solid wood, mail, or flesh. Unless that 160 lb bow imparts considerable spin at the start of the shot I don't see how air resistance on feathers is going to create that much force.

    • @nazyn2250
      @nazyn2250 Před 3 lety +2

      It would also be pretty horrible design if that much energy went into the spin rather than the actual shot. A bit of rotation is nice for stability in flight but the absolute majority of energy should be used to propel the arrow and give it range. If anyone wanted the arrow to really spin then both the fletchings and the arrowhead would have some type of screw shape.
      The same really goes for the silk shirt. Expecting the arrow to cut behind the silk but not through it feels like expecting a sheathed sword to cut something without damaging the sheath.
      This is not to disparage the video or the tests, it just sometimes astounds me how much common myths/assumptions seem to go against intuition.

  • @RaptureZJ88
    @RaptureZJ88 Před 3 lety +41

    I am waiting for Todd to get bored of the "Quarantine Longbow" and move on to the "Quarantine Trebuchet" and his better half coming out to find him only for Todd to pop out of small castle he built surrounded by a moat and curtain wall from which he will found his new kingdom.

    • @edwardteach3000
      @edwardteach3000 Před 3 lety +3

      I read "Quarantine" as "Tarantino" for some a absurd reason and was very confused.

    • @robertshell4176
      @robertshell4176 Před 3 lety +3

      Sounds like shad haha

    • @andreww830
      @andreww830 Před 3 lety +2

      @@edwardteach3000 Sounds like a good time either way!

  • @bantakkor8039
    @bantakkor8039 Před 3 lety

    I pretty much always like your levelheaded format and therefore really appreciate your adding more extensive explanation in regards to the point of view you're talking from. As you said, if someone expects the arrow to pass through and keep flying it did not pass through, while if someone is thinking about the head and maybe a few fingers of wood, it does. Also maybe the person was thinking about a board and not a structure... and so on.
    Which is why this is my favourite channel in regards to these things, most of the others kinda annoyed me with their adamant statements that "there never was any kind of leather armor" when what they meant to say was "there is no evidence for leather clothing like jackets, as they're seen in games or movies (as they usually want to position themselves against movie- and rpg-armor), to be worn as armor, and it's also highly unlikely (wouldn't have made sense) due to..."

  • @spawniscariot9756
    @spawniscariot9756 Před 3 lety +1

    Yet another cracking video with a bunch of fascinating data. Cheers!

  • @randalthor741
    @randalthor741 Před 3 lety +4

    One thing I've heard said about silk vs. arrows is that Mongols would wear a silk *cape* that would billow out behind them, and that the billowing cape would entangle any arrows falling down towards them (ie. shot in an arc at long range), robbing them of momentum and pulling them to strike at a different angle so that the arrow would only cause minor wounds at worst.
    Is there any truth in that? I have no idea...

    • @DreadX10
      @DreadX10 Před 3 lety

      This has been tested and yes it worked. With loose fabric, the arrowhead takes the silk with it (but not always) and now has to accelerate all that cloth (oriented perpendicular to the arrows flightpath) so it looses a lot of momentum in those last feet to the target.

    • @shrekas2966
      @shrekas2966 Před 3 lety

      Ever seen a mongol with a cape in a depiction? Traditional mongol clithes are made out of felt, not silk.

    • @randalthor741
      @randalthor741 Před 3 lety

      @@shrekas2966 I absolutely have seen depictions of Mongols with capes in secondary sources, but I have no idea if those are based on depictions or descriptions from primary sources, or just based on the imagination of the artists. Which is part of why I said I have no idea if there's any truth to it.

    • @shrekas2966
      @shrekas2966 Před 3 lety

      @@randalthor741 thing is, who do you call a mongol?
      The most accurate depiction of early mongol expansion ive seen depicts then wearing similar lamellar armors like chinese made out of steel or leather, sometimes both. They are worn on a somple kaftan, which was mostly wool back then. no capes on top.
      The depiction was made by one of the middle eastern dynasties.

    • @shrekas2966
      @shrekas2966 Před 3 lety

      @@randalthor741 brewminate.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/111319-36-History-Medieval-Middle-Ages-Mongol-China.jpg

  • @ThalassTKynn
    @ThalassTKynn Před 3 lety +18

    If nothing else you've come up with a fun way to make kindling.

  • @Greywolf74
    @Greywolf74 Před 3 lety

    Im really enjoying your videos Tod. I just discovered your channel yesterday and Ive been binge watching them. Got my sub fo sho. Keep up the good work mate!

  • @pg259
    @pg259 Před 3 lety +1

    Great video again! Received my ordered dagger today, really love it!

  • @the_engineer2345
    @the_engineer2345 Před 3 lety +5

    One thought about the silk....
    I remember a video in which silk against arrows were tested in the context of japanese samurais.
    Sadly I do not remember who made this video.
    It was about samurais on horseback wearing some kind of silk shirts.
    The shirts "balloned" because of the speed of the galloping horse.
    And these "balloned" silk had some stopping power against arrows.
    Due to distance between silk and body of the samurai. The silk "catches" the arrow and slows the arrow down.
    Sorry but my english skills cant explain it better.
    I hope this comment helps.

    • @2bingtim
      @2bingtim Před 3 lety +2

      Plenty of loose material is key, similar to how archery back stop netting works.

    • @xidarian
      @xidarian Před 3 lety

      A horo? I've seen that in a video but it's a large cape that blows behind you on horseback not a shirt. It does work but by grabbing onto the arrow head and wrapping around the shaft because its loosely blowing in the air.

  • @keithrosenberg5486
    @keithrosenberg5486 Před 3 lety +24

    That does prove that a reasonable thickness of Oak is an effective armor against arrows.

    • @Specter_1125
      @Specter_1125 Před 3 lety +5

      Armor is only reasonable if it’s a reasonable weight

    • @Yorick257
      @Yorick257 Před 3 lety

      At the very least a shield. But it's still gonna be super heavy

    • @matthiuskoenig3378
      @matthiuskoenig3378 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Specter_1125 reasonable weight would depend on context. body armour or warwagon/ship/siege tower armour?

    • @pRahvi0
      @pRahvi0 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Yorick257 Yep. Shields were laminated for that very reason - to make them sturdier than equal weight of plain wood.

    • @lukesheridan4623
      @lukesheridan4623 Před 3 lety +8

      Guy inside a log yelling at archers: what are you going to do without your pointy twang sticks now huh!

  • @marcelomariano1999
    @marcelomariano1999 Před rokem +1

    Great work, Tod !

  • @gerardmaroney3918
    @gerardmaroney3918 Před 3 lety

    Thanks very much, Tod. I love your work.

  • @themerrydamber
    @themerrydamber Před 3 lety +36

    iirc the "silk armor" is analogous to a gambeson, not a silk shirt.

    • @maximsavage
      @maximsavage Před 3 lety +9

      Even then, the point of a gambeson isn't for the fabric to be pulled into the wound and facilitate extracting the arrow, it's to prevent penetration in the first place.

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Před 3 lety +11

      @@maximsavage well, maybe the Mongols had regular armour to slow down the arrow head mostly, and had a loose fitting silk shirt under everything else.
      So that the full speed arrow head can not be stopped, but slowed down arrow head after it penetrated all the other armour layer, can be wrapped around with final silk layer as it penetrade the skin.

    • @maximsavage
      @maximsavage Před 3 lety +2

      @@davidjacobs8558 That sounds... plausible, perhaps. It would make for a worthwhile test, at the very least. We know for a fact that the mongols had armor, a kind of leather lamellar, for instance, and that some also wore mail. However, if this hypothesis has any chance of being true, I think we'll need a weaker bow to test it. As far as I know, and I might be wrong, 160 lbs of draw weight wasn't very common in the eurasian steppe. I've seen 120 lbs longbows shoot clean through a shirt of properly riveted mail, it was like the armor didn't exist as far as that arrow was concerned. But, we know that mail could stop arrows, which suggests those bows were weaker.

    • @BADALEX1
      @BADALEX1 Před 3 lety +2

      @@maximsavage No. The Mongolian compound bow alledgedly had a draw weight of 150lbs as standard. The silk khalat was multi-layered and used for the exact reasons described. It wasn't a one layer silk shirt from marks and spencer or something.

    • @maximsavage
      @maximsavage Před 3 lety +2

      @@BADALEX1 Then we need a new test with a historically accurate khalat, with and without armor over it.

  • @dr.lexwinter8604
    @dr.lexwinter8604 Před 3 lety +12

    I seriously didn't recognize him without the stubble. He was like "It's Tod of Tod's workshop here." and I was like "You're not Tod!" and went clicking on his channel to find out who this geezer is. GROW THE BEARD BACK TOD! PLEASE, I'M SCARED. :(

    • @vladdrakul7851
      @vladdrakul7851 Před 3 lety +1

      I know it's terrifying. I shat myself when I saw him. Jumping out of airplanes in the RAF back in the 1970s was a doddle compared to this. Nothing compares to this sight. I would rather be in the front wave over the top at the Somme than see that horror again. 'THE HORROR! THE HORROR!' (Citing Marlon Brando in 'Apocalypse Now') An alien clone version.! (just kidding!). As to the video itself, As someone else has remarked here already, his self criticism unlike our MSM who never acknowledge their mistakes or bias, gives me trust in this man and his show. Todd is great, though his name in German means 'death'. Great show, great guy!

  • @robertsnook7443
    @robertsnook7443 Před 3 lety

    Well done for putting in the extra effort!

  • @lewisenator
    @lewisenator Před 3 lety

    I really appreciate all the edits!

  • @DobleWhiteAndStabley
    @DobleWhiteAndStabley Před 3 lety +35

    I heard the mongols used silk capes to catch and slow the arrows as they were riding away the cape billows behind at a 45 ish degree angle to the angle of attack like sloped tank armor (accept not hard) wonder if you can debunk that one.

    • @susanmaggiora4800
      @susanmaggiora4800 Před 3 lety +17

      Panic The Scholar Knight. I don’t know if they actually did this, but I saw a feature about this on some history channel type show, where they test weapons & do experimental archaeology. As long as the silk was billowed out, it was incredibly effective at stopping or considerably slowing the arrows. I will caveat that with the fact that I can’t recall if they were shooting with high poundage bows or any kind of war points.

    • @goreobsessed2308
      @goreobsessed2308 Před 3 lety +2

      This probably would help I've seen rows of curtains stop small calibur rounds because they deflect going through them. Then again arrows are alot heavier and might deflect less

    • @XtreeM_FaiL
      @XtreeM_FaiL Před 3 lety +1

      The silk bag work.
      I saw a document 10-15 years a go where it was tested and it stopped an arrow.

    • @lucanic4328
      @lucanic4328 Před 3 lety +9

      Main issue with that documentary is that they were using a light draw weight kyudo bows, and not a war yumi so the results might actually be different

    • @lucanic4328
      @lucanic4328 Před 3 lety +9

      By the way it's called Horo:
      gunbai-militaryhistory.blogspot.com/2018/02/horo-samurai-cape.html?m=1

  • @JamesAce
    @JamesAce Před 3 lety +18

    Lockdown longbow is the actual best thing to come out of the lockdown change my mind

    • @AggelosKyriou
      @AggelosKyriou Před 3 lety

      we won't!

    • @skylerstevens8887
      @skylerstevens8887 Před 3 lety +1

      America just launched its own astronauts to the moon again via SpaceX recently. Or the Starlink satellites that will allow us to watch Tod's Workshop in the middle of the ocean is pretty good. Or the new Jeorg magazine for his repeating crossbow? In all honesty the Lockdown Longbow series has been great though I haven't missed one :)

    • @sebastianriz4703
      @sebastianriz4703 Před 3 lety +1

      I dunno, getting a free $4000 from the government was lit. I got an AR15 and a glock from it.

  • @samcoote9653
    @samcoote9653 Před 3 lety

    The second you started shooting at the planks I said to myself well its not nailed down or held by bracing in a frame, so its not a great test. But as you always do Tod, you realised the same thing and adjusted the test accordingly. This is why I love this channel so much, it may not be rocket science, but you definitely come up with the most definitive tests that Ive seen. Loved this one even if you felt it needed the popups. Cheers mate!

    • @samcoote9653
      @samcoote9653 Před 3 lety

      It shows you take enough pride in your work, your channel, and your equipment that you'll go back and correct errors or pull yourself up for being too sure, and that is a rare quality these days for sure :)

  • @lightprint348
    @lightprint348 Před 3 lety +1

    your approach to your enthusiastic statements and own fallibility does you credit, thanks for sharing your own nuanced thinking.

  • @mrsmith4036
    @mrsmith4036 Před 3 lety +4

    Open up youtube and see an upload from Tod from 1 min ago? Gonna be a good day!

  • @robc6391
    @robc6391 Před 3 lety +3

    It was most assuredly a great video Tod. It shows two things (apart from the subject matter of course :D)
    1. We should always remember not to jump into generalized conclusions based on a simple single experiment and turn that into a universal truth (a lot of us do that from time to time, in most cases subconsciously. After all, we want to be right and feel vindicated by our findings).
    2. It showed once again why I love your channel - not only are your skills and products featured in your vids simply, well... incredible. But there is a true passion and honesty to actually learn things and understand the past as best as possible. No grandstanding, sweeping proclamations etc. and that is not that common these days especially on this platform filled with clickbait titles and half-truths.
    Thanks for these cool little films with "lockdown longbow"

    • @tods_workshop
      @tods_workshop  Před 3 lety +2

      Thanks Rob, very kind. Yes absolutely, we are all guilty of over a egging the pudding from time to time and ultimately it just muddies the waters

  • @urglefloggahthethird1202

    Tod popping in from time to time to criticise himself was both instructive and hilarious at the same time. Nice way of doing it.

  • @thetruemorg
    @thetruemorg Před 3 lety

    I really like this video where you came back and described a more moderate viewpoint. It's so the way that these things go where are you producing video and then in the editing room you think about what you said. In my opinion do this all the time

  • @Faxeable
    @Faxeable Před 3 lety +7

    Those interventions, those comments of "Wait, that's not my standards", those take a huge amount of self reflecting and self awarenes. Kudos for that.
    Also, you look much older in those interventions than in your regular videos xD

  • @ExUSSailor
    @ExUSSailor Před 3 lety +28

    I've never heard the drilling one, but surely, if it were true, we'd see drill bit shaped arrowheads, that would better exploit that action?

    • @ABAlphaBeta
      @ABAlphaBeta Před 3 lety +3

      I've definitely seen such arrow points before, with a twisting design

    • @jm8361
      @jm8361 Před 3 lety

      I have heard of using single bevel broad head to accentuate the twisting in a target. Not sure it really helps.

    • @jonathanh4443
      @jonathanh4443 Před 3 lety +1

      The "drill bit" wouldn’t cause as much damage as a Brodhead with fixed blades. Imagine a Brodhead going straight in, and cutting a straight path the whole way in. Now imagine turning the Brodhead as it goes in. Which causes more surface area cut?

    • @snafu2350
      @snafu2350 Před 3 lety +2

      I'd guess it's simply a marketing ploy: without the constant input of force (cf a drill), the twisting/rotational action would be quickly countered by the friction of the arrowhead's rotation within the penetration/wound. Plus, arrowheads don't spin as fast as a rifled shot (or have the bullet's initial momentum energy), & the attached shaft would also induce friction drag as it penetrates deeper
      In summary: good idea as a thought experiment, but unlikely (to say the least) to work in practice :)

  • @mikemcginley6309
    @mikemcginley6309 Před 3 lety

    Love what you do! Please keep doing it.

  • @Jacob-un3ql
    @Jacob-un3ql Před 3 lety

    So much respect, it's exceedingly hard to admit when you've made a mistake! It makes me love your content even more!