mhensley
First Post
and having just (last week!) finished reading Bernard Cornwell's Azincourt.
Great book and gives you pretty much everything you need to know about longbows. English archers were greatly feared for a reason.
and having just (last week!) finished reading Bernard Cornwell's Azincourt.
No, it isn't. It really, really isn't. The two are related to the same quantities, ...
Indeed so. The city of Worcester, in the UK, where I live, has such a place. I believe also (although this may be fallacious) that the law which required men to do this is actually still on the statute in some places, and therefore potentially enforceable!... Englishmen for a time, were actually required to participate in regular archery practice. The place in a village where this occured was called the Butts. A lot of villages still have areas or streets named this even today.
I suspect this idea has more to do with effectiveness then stopping power. The English longbowman's favorite target was the French Knight. When you are trying to stop heavy cavalry, taking out the horse is usually just as effective as taking out the rider. A horse is a big target from above so dropping arrows have a good chance to hit. The horse is also not likely to be as well armored as the rider. Most archers aren't going to be calmly loosing arrows as the charging knights get close. The bowmen will ideally retire behind a line of men-at-arms before the charge hits home, or draw hand weapons if they have to fight themselves. The longbow was definitely a weapon used to volley fire at range.I've seen arguments for and against that concept. Some say that all the stopping power of the arrow came from gravity. It was the downwards arc where the arrow gained the most velocity. And even then, normally only after having been fired pretty much straight up.
Thanks Umbarn. I honestly didn't know there was a difference between energy and momentum. That was pretty cool. Made me feel like I was back in a high school math or physics class though ... but still pretty cool.
So does that explain why a large caliber round, or a hollow point round of any caliber, does more damage? Is it because it's able to transfer more of it's momentum to the target?
Thanks Umbarn. I honestly didn't know there was a difference between energy and momentum. That was pretty cool. Made me feel like I was back in a high school math or physics class though ... but still pretty cool.
So does that explain why a large caliber round, or a hollow point round of any caliber, does more damage? Is it because it's able to transfer more of it's momentum to the target?
The place in a village where this occured was called the Butts. A lot of villages still have areas or streets named this even today.
Simply put, the idea of firing six arrows into a target in one round from five feet away is a wee bit prepostorous. But the game says "WHO CARES THIS IS KICKING RAD" and lets you do it anyways. And there's nothing wrong with that.