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#2
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sure, schlackoff, a 350# draw crossbow can fire twenty bolts a minute, while a
100# longbow can fire off nearer to 100 shafts a minute. anything you say. (Steven Shelikoff) Date: 10/13/2004 11:39 PM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: On 14 Oct 2004 01:29:49 GMT, (JAXAshby) wrote: schlackoff, weapons of war crossbows were not the kiddie toys you are thinking of. They had draws, I believe, of 250 to 350 pounds, and two men with a windlass drew them back into firing position. Hard to keep up with a longbow with that. two different weapons, with the tactical advantage going to longbows because of their range and rate of fire. Jox, your rate of fire on each are way off on the low side. As usual, you are wrong. Steve (Steven Shelikoff) Date: 10/13/2004 8:26 AM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: On 13 Oct 2004 11:12:22 GMT, (JAXAshby) wrote: I was just repeating what I read in the Museum that had the extensive display of crossbows. btw, IIRC it took two men most of two minutes to load and fire a crossbow, while a longbowman could pump out three shafts a minute. That made the lowbow the artillery of its time and the crossbow the armor-busting handgranade. Did that tidbit about repeating rates come from the museum also? It was obviously written by someone who has no experience firing either a crossbow or a longbow. Steve Jim Richardson Date: 10/13/2004 5:02 AM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: On 13 Oct 2004 01:10:16 GMT, JAXAshby wrote: A real crossbow bolt would be a much more effective projectile (accuracy, range, lethality, reliability) as a weapon of war, the biggest crossbows ever had a range of about 30 feet, as compared to about 100 years for long bows. the crossbow, however, could penetrate a knight's armor. crossbows were outlawed for war (except against the infidels) by some pope. I assure you, that "as a weapon of war" crossbows are not limited in range to 30 feet. Nor were long bows limited to 100 yards, (ignoring obvious typo) A good yew longbow, is capable of penetrating iron mail, at a distance of greater than 100 yards. It's effectiveness on unarmoured targets goes beyond that range. A strong crossbow, with a metal prod, of about 200lbs, is quite capable of penetrating light mail at 50 yards (not feet) The heavier quarrel does have less effective range than a longbow or modern compound bow shooting longer, but lighter arrows. The main advantage of the crossbow was the simplicity of use, a longbowman took years to develope the needed skill, crossbows could be used with far less training and practice. The last use of crossbows in general warfare, rather than as indigenous weapons (like the Hmong bamboo crossbows in Vietnam) or special forces type uses, was in the 1894-95 sino-japanese war, where many of the chinese troops were armed with repeating crossbows, they weren't particularly powerful, but they were interesting devices none the less, and they were certainly lethal at a far greater range than 30 ft ![]() -- Jim Richardson http://www.eskimo.com/~warlock Step by step, day by day, machine by machine, the penguins march forward. |
#3
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On 14 Oct 2004 12:28:53 GMT, (JAXAshby) wrote:
sure, schlackoff, a 350# draw crossbow can fire twenty bolts a minute, while a 100# longbow can fire off nearer to 100 shafts a minute. anything you say. Lol. That's what YOU said, not me. I just said you're way off on the firing rate, on the low side. It doesn't take 2 men 2 minutes to re-fire a crossbow and it doesn't take 20 seconds re-fire a longbow. Those numbers are gross exaggerations... just like your IQ. Steve (Steven Shelikoff) Date: 10/13/2004 11:39 PM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: On 14 Oct 2004 01:29:49 GMT, (JAXAshby) wrote: schlackoff, weapons of war crossbows were not the kiddie toys you are thinking of. They had draws, I believe, of 250 to 350 pounds, and two men with a windlass drew them back into firing position. Hard to keep up with a longbow with that. two different weapons, with the tactical advantage going to longbows because of their range and rate of fire. Jox, your rate of fire on each are way off on the low side. As usual, you are wrong. Steve (Steven Shelikoff) Date: 10/13/2004 8:26 AM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: On 13 Oct 2004 11:12:22 GMT, (JAXAshby) wrote: I was just repeating what I read in the Museum that had the extensive display of crossbows. btw, IIRC it took two men most of two minutes to load and fire a crossbow, while a longbowman could pump out three shafts a minute. That made the lowbow the artillery of its time and the crossbow the armor-busting handgranade. Did that tidbit about repeating rates come from the museum also? It was obviously written by someone who has no experience firing either a crossbow or a longbow. Steve Jim Richardson Date: 10/13/2004 5:02 AM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: On 13 Oct 2004 01:10:16 GMT, JAXAshby wrote: A real crossbow bolt would be a much more effective projectile (accuracy, range, lethality, reliability) as a weapon of war, the biggest crossbows ever had a range of about 30 feet, as compared to about 100 years for long bows. the crossbow, however, could penetrate a knight's armor. crossbows were outlawed for war (except against the infidels) by some pope. I assure you, that "as a weapon of war" crossbows are not limited in range to 30 feet. Nor were long bows limited to 100 yards, (ignoring obvious typo) A good yew longbow, is capable of penetrating iron mail, at a distance of greater than 100 yards. It's effectiveness on unarmoured targets goes beyond that range. A strong crossbow, with a metal prod, of about 200lbs, is quite capable of penetrating light mail at 50 yards (not feet) The heavier quarrel does have less effective range than a longbow or modern compound bow shooting longer, but lighter arrows. The main advantage of the crossbow was the simplicity of use, a longbowman took years to develope the needed skill, crossbows could be used with far less training and practice. The last use of crossbows in general warfare, rather than as indigenous weapons (like the Hmong bamboo crossbows in Vietnam) or special forces type uses, was in the 1894-95 sino-japanese war, where many of the chinese troops were armed with repeating crossbows, they weren't particularly powerful, but they were interesting devices none the less, and they were certainly lethal at a far greater range than 30 ft ![]() -- Jim Richardson http://www.eskimo.com/~warlock Step by step, day by day, machine by machine, the penguins march forward. |
#4
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On 14 Oct 2004 12:28:53 GMT, (JAXAshby) wrote:
sure, schlackoff, a 350# draw crossbow can fire twenty bolts a minute, while a 100# longbow can fire off nearer to 100 shafts a minute. I don't think even Robin Hood could manage to pull, aim and release in 0.6 seconds, JAX. That would be premature archeration. Try "six per minute" and not sustained, either, as it is very tiring to volley arrows. If you wanted to "shoot your load", a modern longbow can loose up to 14 arrows in a minute (see http://www.channel4.com/history/micr.../longbow1.html but if you got six a minute for 20 minutes at say, Agincourt or other real-life battles where the longbow was the primary offensive weapon, you would be doing very well indeed. R. |
#5
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rhys, I was taking schlackoff's stupid statement to its conclusion.
real figures for bows as weapons of war were about one bolt even two minutes for the crossbow, and about 6 shafts a minute for the longbow. the crossbow had a net effective range of about 30 feet, the longbow about 100 yards. rhys Date: 10/14/2004 11:54 AM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: On 14 Oct 2004 12:28:53 GMT, (JAXAshby) wrote: sure, schlackoff, a 350# draw crossbow can fire twenty bolts a minute, while a 100# longbow can fire off nearer to 100 shafts a minute. I don't think even Robin Hood could manage to pull, aim and release in 0.6 seconds, JAX. That would be premature archeration. Try "six per minute" and not sustained, either, as it is very tiring to volley arrows. If you wanted to "shoot your load", a modern longbow can loose up to 14 arrows in a minute (see http://www.channel4.com/history/micr.../longbow1.html but if you got six a minute for 20 minutes at say, Agincourt or other real-life battles where the longbow was the primary offensive weapon, you would be doing very well indeed. R. |
#6
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#7
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schlakoff, admit you were the source of the conclusion, **IF** you are capable
of understanding the ramifications of your statement. otherwise, admit you abject stupidity. (Steven Shelikoff) Date: 10/15/2004 12:15 AM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: On 15 Oct 2004 00:30:55 GMT, (JAXAshby) wrote: rhys, I was taking schlackoff's stupid statement to its conclusion. No, you were making yet another of your stupid statements. Steve |
#8
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On 15 Oct 2004 11:59:51 GMT, (JAXAshby) wrote:
schlakoff, admit you were the source of the conclusion, **IF** you are capable of understanding the ramifications of your statement. otherwise, admit you abject stupidity. Jox, admit your conclusion that "a 350# draw crossbow can fire twenty bolts a minute, while a 100# longbow can fire off nearer to 100 shafts a minute" is a completely absurd extension from the simple statement that your original firing rate of "it took two men most of two minutes to load and fire a crossbow, while a longbowman could pump out three shafts a minute" is on the high side. If you can't imagine a true firing rate somewhere between those two extremes, you are even dumber than you appear to be... and that's pretty dumb. Steve (Steven Shelikoff) Date: 10/15/2004 12:15 AM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: On 15 Oct 2004 00:30:55 GMT, (JAXAshby) wrote: rhys, I was taking schlackoff's stupid statement to its conclusion. No, you were making yet another of your stupid statements. Steve |
#9
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On 15 Oct 2004 00:30:55 GMT,
JAXAshby wrote: rhys, I was taking schlackoff's stupid statement to its conclusion. real figures for bows as weapons of war were about one bolt even two minutes for the crossbow, and about 6 shafts a minute for the longbow. the crossbow had a net effective range of about 30 feet, the longbow about 100 yards. Your range figure for crossbows is silly. Effective range of a crossbow of medieval pattern, against armoured targets, is about 50 yards. Rate of fire numbers are a bit bogus also, 6 shots/min for a longbow is doable, for a very short time period. A std crossbow could do about 1 shot per min, or perhaps a bit more. Slower for some designs, faster for others. -- Jim Richardson http://www.eskimo.com/~warlock "If guns cause crime, mine must be defective." -Ted Nugent |
#10
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jim, you seem to not understand that crossbows used shorts bolts that had no
fletching. that means the bolts weren't much more than frisbees past a very short distance. 30 feet, the museum stated. having seen a bolt, I don't doubt that figure. Jim Richardson Date: 10/15/2004 3:32 AM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: On 15 Oct 2004 00:30:55 GMT, JAXAshby wrote: rhys, I was taking schlackoff's stupid statement to its conclusion. real figures for bows as weapons of war were about one bolt even two minutes for the crossbow, and about 6 shafts a minute for the longbow. the crossbow had a net effective range of about 30 feet, the longbow about 100 yards. Your range figure for crossbows is silly. Effective range of a crossbow of medieval pattern, against armoured targets, is about 50 yards. Rate of fire numbers are a bit bogus also, 6 shots/min for a longbow is doable, for a very short time period. A std crossbow could do about 1 shot per min, or perhaps a bit more. Slower for some designs, faster for others. -- Jim Richardson http://www.eskimo.com/~warlock "If guns cause crime, mine must be defective." -Ted Nugent |
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