3:49 Imagine being 4 rows back, behind a shield wall, just gearing for the charge and a small boulder decimates your nuts.
@Daracdor6 ай бұрын
oh my
@elricdotah6 ай бұрын
Called shot to the nuts...
@paulgee34116 ай бұрын
"decimates your nuts"...it takes one in ten of them you mean?
@Mr850man5 ай бұрын
The rolling stone ground deflected nut shot scares me way more than a direct hit to the dome LMAO
@pseudonym7455 ай бұрын
Don't spell it out, DON'T SPELL IT OUT! - He spelt it out... 😭🫨🤯😵
@7411y6 ай бұрын
Good lord, I didn't expect the mental image of being faced by a THOUSAND slingers
@cal21276 ай бұрын
carthage definitely brought hundreds during the punic wars
@brendontruong71275 ай бұрын
I have a hunch that Romans actually used slings a lot more often in battle than it is currently shown. They usually saved javelins to break formations so I would assume they would use slings when given the opportunity. Something like a high ground, the enemy being far away, defending a fort, and providing ranged support for their friends.
@jessalaguicia70885 ай бұрын
Spaniards had to face it when fighting the natives around 1519. They describe how their brothers in arms are badly hurt by them; getting knocked out or straight up getting their skulls broken. Even using helmets
@MarcusHelius5 ай бұрын
The sound of a thousand rocks whizzing through the air and striking around you must surely be terrifying
@KashTube-n8y4 ай бұрын
@@brendontruong7127They definitely did. The Romans used them against cavalry, particularly against the Parthians. After Carhhae, a subordinate of Mark Anthony, if I remember correctly, used them to deadly effect against the Parthians, killing one of their Princes.
@darylwilliams78836 ай бұрын
The accuracy of those shots by itself convinces me that this sling was an effective weapon. I had no idea you could learn to sling stones so accurately.
@darthplagueis136 ай бұрын
To be fair, these shots were pretty close range. Still skillfully aimed, but you don't stay accurate at anywhere near the same range you could with a bow or crossbow.
@johnmchugh80886 ай бұрын
and imagine hundreds slingers!
@drppenev6 ай бұрын
They trained by hunting birds! Imagine the accuracy.
@cacogenicist6 ай бұрын
I think it takes quite a _lot_ of practice.
@frenchys_prospecting6 ай бұрын
Primitive technology does a good video on slings where he goes from zero to fairly deadly within a few days or hours.
@joebombero16 ай бұрын
At a snowball fight on MU campus in 1984, I witnessed Lacrosse players using their lacrosse throwers to launch snowballs through an entire house, smashing the window on the street, traveling through the house and exiting by smashing rear windows and continuing through the back yard. I never forgot that.
@elricdotah6 ай бұрын
I waited for him to use a staff sling. Those are DEADLY...
@michaelbruce18475 ай бұрын
Well.. .that says more about Lacrosse players than the actual weapon..... however, pretty good for grouse hunting!!!
@mocifus135 ай бұрын
Those pesky snowball covered rocks!
@sznikers4 ай бұрын
@@mocifus13 before class make snowballs, pour some water from bottle over it, enough to make it moist but not into mud, leave it outside school so it can refreeze. Pick them later on for after school snowball fight 😂😂😂
@zubenelgenubi4 ай бұрын
1 spear may be more damaging, but multiple stones, even with mediocre accuracy is far more effective in damaging the enemy!
@TheRealTburt5 ай бұрын
The Diodorus quote touched on a very important aspect of using a sling: years and years of practice. That was something that crossbows and firearms fixed, the speed of training.
@GaryBickford4 ай бұрын
Also the difference between the early flintlock rifle and AK-47. It took quite a while of training and practice to achieve maintaining, reloading, and firing a flintlock or musket more than once per minute. An AK-47 could be pulled out of the mud and fire multiple rounds per second.
@perillat992 күн бұрын
True but slings are quite intuitive. I remember nailing it and becoming accurate in a few days. Though that could've been due to young age
@orsonincharge48796 ай бұрын
A sling around his waist and a pocket full of pebbles makes this chap a dangerous proposition .
@hatuletoh6 ай бұрын
I was just thinking that. He could murder hikers with impunity.
@voornaam31916 ай бұрын
I think the story of David and Goliath is not that strange. When shepherds defend their cattle against wolves or bears, having a slingshot is a very good idea. An angry strong man with a slingshot? Hmmm.
@thefirm97466 ай бұрын
@@voornaam3191 If they added a line in the Bible about how David had used his sling to kill bears and wolves to protect his flock, the story would be so much more believable. On the other hand, that makes it far less necessary to believe that this all came about because God chose David. It all makes sense now. Young shepherd kills a giant warrior, ends up being King and is a massive womanizer. Well, of course. He was a total badass the whole time.
@21stcenturyscots6 ай бұрын
It is the coward weapon, only good at long distance. Try hitting a fast moving target with that that is running towards you. And once the angry giant is right in front of your face with a knife… Good luck!
@orsonincharge48796 ай бұрын
@@21stcenturyscots .. coward weapon ? This is warfare ! The dead and idiots cry about fair . Plus , these are used to hunt animals , smaller and faster than humans . yes against one guy he might miss , try running at a slinger formation , oh wait , they tried that back in those times and they were very effective . And my slingers have a shield wall just behind them . Good luck!
@mbrackeva6 ай бұрын
The advantage of using pebbles over arrows is that arrows have to be crafted, while pebbles can be found everywhere on the ground. And they respawn after three days.
@mrcheese53836 ай бұрын
Respawning pebbles?
@Blackadder756 ай бұрын
@@mrcheese5383 video game tradition..... but to be fair, those chests and lockboxes full of bandit loot , arrows, or health kits also do that
@Menaceblue36 ай бұрын
@@mrcheese5383 Pebbles are a natural renewable resource that can be grown anywhere
@campandcook31186 ай бұрын
Arrows and speers with prepared tips cant be fired back. Stones that don't take out the enemy give him more ammo
@patrickstjean76466 ай бұрын
If you complete the right achievement, the pebbles will respawn right in your pouch
@PatchyHedge6 ай бұрын
As a nurse, I can't help but think that even with the glancing blows to the head, they would incapacitate, discombobulate, and take them out of the battle or make it easier for their opponents to dispatch. This video really adds context to the account of David and Goliath. Well done! My son is going to enjoy watching this :)
@janzwendelaar9075 ай бұрын
Do note that in that story, David doesn't ask for strength, or shuffle his feet at the thought of having to fight, the kid came to the battlefield, heard Goliath, started frothing at the mouth and begged for permission to kill him. David knew he was him all along.
@hah-vj7hc5 ай бұрын
Another relevant piece of context: David went on to murder 200 infidels, cut off their foreskins and brought those to a father who sold him his daughhter for the foreskins.
@Skorpychan5 ай бұрын
Concussions are definitely bad if you're trying to do anything that requires thought.
@Skiamakhos5 ай бұрын
I remember once going to the Jorvik Viking Experience & it was closed for renovations but they had some talks by forensic anthropologists taking us over the skeletons that had been found in the area from the era of the Danelaw and the Scandinavians' presence in York. Quite a few of the people there had died from blows to the head, and the fractures didn't look like anything much, very much reminiscent of OP's "it's softened the melon". They were probably about the size of a 10p coin, the bone depressed by maybe a couple of millimeters, but the expert told us they almost certainly died from bleeding into and around the brain.
@fieldrequired2835 ай бұрын
David brought a gun to a knife fight, basically.
@JurorNumber244 ай бұрын
I always laugh when I see the modern depiction of David vs. Goliath. A child didn't kill a giant with a toy, a young man brought a pistol to a knife fight.
@timothyaure96023 ай бұрын
David had already taken out lions and bears
@robertmoore35813 ай бұрын
I saw a theory it was a staff sling
@Ricimer6713 ай бұрын
Well put.
@BobofWOGGLE3 ай бұрын
It's even better than that, it wasn't a knife fight. The big man said "I'm so confident I could fold any one of you that I'll even allow weapons" So it really is like some guy outside a bar taking his shirt off and yelling "Y'WANNA GO!? LET'S GO!" only for the other guy to pull a glock.
@dennykitch48063 ай бұрын
Goliath was so sure of himself that he didn't bother to duck
@M_Bamboozled5 ай бұрын
These weapons are a good reminder that you didn't need to kill the enemy in a battle. Every man knocked out or physically disabled was out of the fight, helping him took away resources & seeing many colleagues injured and numbers depleted destroys morale and order.
@holy39795 ай бұрын
Yup, a strategy still very much in use by irregular forces to this very day.
@redmalproductions35304 ай бұрын
In the Biblical story of David and Goliath, David incapacitates Goliath with the sling (though the wound would probably have killed him in time). David take Goliath's sword and cuts off his head. Probably the way a lot of sling victims left the Earth - knocked out or incapacitated by a slinger, taken out by a swordsmen as they passed.
@anordenaryman.70576 ай бұрын
When you consider the amount of blacksmithing, woodworking, and assembling needed to make an arrow, a cart load of river stones is far more bang for the army's buck. And if you win the battle, you can collect them undamaged for the next battle. I am sure they were used more than we think.
@michaelneuwirth34146 ай бұрын
Guter Kommentar! Collecting stones, piling them up somewhere and throwing them later simply requires nothing more than the stones available in nature and an order. Even if subordinates are good for nothing else, anyone can do this job. Due to the weight and the transport problem, I think a stationary deployment for defence from an elevated position is most likely.
@dragoscoco21736 ай бұрын
Collecting stones from the battlefield is overkill. They get sourced on the go just about everywhere. And in more static battles like sieges you can get creative and start bringing some lead to cast or fire some out of clay. But usually nobody carried cartloads of stones to sling let alone cart them back.
@stefthorman85486 ай бұрын
@@dragoscoco2173 the stones needs to be uniform, and the proper shape, so i would bet they carted stones around, since random jagged rocks, would be horrible for accuracy, theirs an reason why David spent so much time picking the perfect river rocks
@dragoscoco21736 ай бұрын
@@stefthorman8548 For accuracy having some consistency, sure. But even so the weight and shape variation would not have been enough for arrow or spear like precision. It was a weapon in it's own class.
@aldrinmilespartosa15786 ай бұрын
@@stefthorman8548 tbf, it doesnt always need to be accurate. If your facing a large horde of infrantry.
@RonnieStanley-tc6vi6 ай бұрын
Hearing those stones hitting that helmet is impressive by itself.
@lostpony48856 ай бұрын
Should have had a mic on the watermelon.....
@PhilForeman6 ай бұрын
Brains are surprisingly vulnerable to shock injury. The brain sort of floats inside of the skull. I have suffered from a subdural hematoma from a short fall from a bike, with a helmet. Getting hit by a 1 pound rock traveling at this sort of velocity can easily kill, even with the steel helmet with very meager padding.
@brianwalker84655 ай бұрын
I call it "soup in a can" The can might look alright, but all that energy is going somewhere...
@ajs11896 ай бұрын
In the Spanish civil war they used slings to lob grenades over building tops into the adjacent street
@Skorpychan5 ай бұрын
Modern problems sometimes require ancient solutions.
@LordVeritas23575 ай бұрын
@@Skorpychan Iconic!
@tomsmith63793 ай бұрын
That's actually really clever. A sling should launch it farther and faster than an average person could
@D64nz2 ай бұрын
@@tomsmith6379 NGL, I do wonder if anyone ever tried a baseball bat...
@dangracia46114 ай бұрын
It was cool to see this video. As a 10-yr. old kid in about 1960 (yeah, I'm old!), my brother and my cousins and I used to throw rocks with slings at my grandfather's ranch. The rocks were much smaller than the behemoths you were throwing and it was amazing how far we could throw them. Our slings were made out of a patch of cowhide about 3"x2" with leather lacing attached at each end. On one end we tied a loop, which went around our middle finger, and the other leather lace just had a knot in it that we would squeeze between our thumb and the side of our index finger. We'd usually take one swing around and release it going forward. And it would really fly. The road from the corrals up to the ranch house was powdery white sand as you'd find in the Paso Robles area of California and east of it in a small community known as Pozo. Grandpa thought there were way too many rocks mixed in with that white sand, so he made these slings for each of us and showed us how to use them. He and his brother used to hunt rabbits in Texas with them when he was a kid. He cautioned us to never throw it anywhere near a person because, "David killed Goliath with one of these." So we'd throw them from the ranch house up the hill from the corrals down to the corrals and barns. There was one small grain barn that was closest and I could hit that one easily enough. Then there was a main livestock barn across the corral from that and older brother and my cousin could regularly hit that. I could hit it once in a great while. Anyhow, we started up by the ranch house and cleared out all the rocks off that road to about half way down. Of course we were not allowed use our slings if any of the animals were out. He kept a milk cow and her calf in the barn and sometimes had horses in the corrals. That summer and most summers afterwards we would carry our slings with the pouch folded in half and the leather laces wrapped around them. I never go good enough to hunt rabbits with it (would rather use a .22 rifle for that) but had a good time using it and was surprised how far we could launch them and how hard they'd hit. Thanks for showing this. By the way, you should probably show how you hold it and how you launch it if you do a follow-up to this. We used both a single time around the head launch and winding it multiple times around our head before letting it fly. Thanks again!
@tinypurplefishesrunlaughin80523 ай бұрын
Yeah exactly I also share your experience with a sling not the size of a baked potato but more like a large marble. Man they used to fly outta sight or punch holes in the barn.
@b.h.abbott-motley24276 ай бұрын
There's a reason various 16th-century Spanish accounts compare the sling to the arquebus. A thicker helmet would provide better protection, but slung stones remained a threat even into the age of firearms.
@foldionepapyrus34416 ай бұрын
Still a threat now really, like most of these old weapons they are still good (sometimes even more dangerous than modern weapons in a modern situation as the protective equipment is tailored to bullets). The only big difference is any moron can be taught to shoot out to reasonable ranges very quickly as virtually all the work is being done by the tool and the gunsmith, and the maximum possible range of a firearm with great proficiency is rather longer, where the old weapons take some real practice and skill to use at all and generally max out in lethal range around the same ballpark a rookie can shoot a rifle accurately...
@WildBearFoot6 ай бұрын
@@b.h.abbott-motley2427 slings are a very compact tool, easy to carry in a pocket and can be used to throw a variety of things, not so long ago they were used to lob grenades. It's true that one slinger trying to hit a single target takes practice but historically the sling was used in combat by both accomplished slingers and novices, the pros taking aim at specific targets, like generals, and novices throwing volleys, similar to how the bow and arrow was sometimes utilized. Point and throw.
@dragoscoco21736 ай бұрын
@@WildBearFoot The sling was hardly used as a precision weapon. It's main use was flinging stones at formations, giving ample room for the inherent imprecision of the shots. It was mainly used for harassment and enemy formation steering on the battlefield. Also in siege warfare, where the concentrated nature of fortifications meant you could easily harass the ones inside while being relatively safe form backfire due to simply positioning yourself more spread out.
@WildBearFoot6 ай бұрын
@@dragoscoco2173 slingers were positioned behind archers because of the slings longer range and used in the volley, hundreds or even thousands of stones and arrows at once. And as for precision, the slingers from the Balearic islands were the most accurate in the ancient world and professional slingers would have been tested for accuracy, the guy in this video is extremely accurate at long distance and his life doesn't depend on it.
@aggese6 ай бұрын
@@dragoscoco2173slings have been used to hunt birds that are taking of in flight
@holzmann84436 ай бұрын
7:43 This level of proficiency sparks joy. Beautiful shot.
@The_Caledonian6 ай бұрын
3:47 is better, right in the nuts
@bj65155 ай бұрын
9:06 Nice red Mellon to simulate brain and blood all over the field of battle, just look at the floor.
@dnbmania5 ай бұрын
The perfect shot
@theOGjaaxter5 ай бұрын
And I love the face he made, and which we were all making, as we involuntarily envisioned a person's head in that helmet instead of a watermelon.
@RecRealMaster5 ай бұрын
Yea imagining how someones face would implode from that kind of direct attack might give nightmares, even more if the stone stays in the persons face
@ahather6 ай бұрын
even if a stone doesn't cave your skull in there's still the matter of spinal injuries because sweet holy whiplash
@Jroc35786 ай бұрын
I was thinking same and just read "Sweet Holy Whiplash" I did a spit take lol great
@Jroc35786 ай бұрын
He would pick up q permanent drool at least and be leaking watermelon juice
@Archaic-Arms6 ай бұрын
A thicker helmet and more padding might provide more protection, but it makes the neck even more vulnerable to breaking or whiplash, like you say.
@donaldboyer81826 ай бұрын
Probably cause a concussion if nothing else. Disorient the victim as well. Would like to all this done with gauges to measure force and maybe some ballistic gel head (unprotected). What would the effective range be a sling? He looked to be rather close to the target.
@stefthorman85486 ай бұрын
@@Archaic-Arms the solution is great bascinets, oversized helmets bolted to the torso, not possible to get whip lash with those
@SportingDrivesinColorado5 ай бұрын
Shepard boys spent day after day running and playing with their slings. Alexander loved his slingers because they could lead enemy cavalry a mile or two away from the battle lines and return later, with no enemy cavalry following them. This was a good show, detailing the seriousness of the sling.
@BLenz-1144 ай бұрын
I think slinging at a helmet on a rock actually minimizes the damage. The helmet can slip aside so easily. If there was a real body below, its inertia would make many of those hits much more serious.
@Mummymunmuggy2 ай бұрын
Good point. The anchor of body weight would impart more force.
@goatboy1506 ай бұрын
A teenager could take out a giant with something like this.
@lumeronswift6 ай бұрын
The irony of the David and Goliath story
@blackforestgiant6486 ай бұрын
Now I see how this could have worked against bears or lions.
@thefirm97466 ай бұрын
I used to think that the David and Goliath story was remarkable and inspiring. Then I saw some videos of people who knew how to use a sling and realized that it was more like the scene in Indiana Jones where Indy shoots that impressive swordsman.
@lpeterman6 ай бұрын
Only in stories told by Bronze-Age goat herders who thought the sun went behind the hills and thunder was the local god getting antsy. Then written down, centuries (or millennia) after the "fact" and translated, re-translated, then re-re-translated and put in a book by people who couldn't speak or read the original poor translations. Yeah, then, maybe.
@JavierEscuella19116 ай бұрын
@@thefirm9746 starting out slinging i thought the same. After graze hitting a 6 inch metal plate from 110 feet its clear to me now that it wasn’t even a fair fight
@marsupialdungbucket6 ай бұрын
The Romans, Carthiginians and others hired Menorcans as mercenary stone-throwers for centuries. In the 1960's a historian wanted to prove this and started hunting on the island for throwing stones. After weeks with little or no luck he asked the local children if they could find any, and he would pay them 10 pesetas (2/3 the cost of a bottle of Coke) for each one. Ten minutes later they came back with their hands full and asking for a bucket to carry the rest! They had found a large pile of them, used for practice.The opposite side of the field had dozens more, left where they had been thrown.
@Adrak-Hiano5 ай бұрын
I'm curious as to how one differentiates a common pebble from a sling stone Location and weight/size I guess but isn't there a large margin for error?
@marsupialdungbucket5 ай бұрын
@@Adrak-Hiano As far as I know, they used river stones wherever possible because they were rounded and smooth. Menorcan rock is mostly volcanic (jagged and pockmarked) so finding hand-sized river stones away from rivers is a strong indicator.
@Adrak-Hiano5 ай бұрын
@@marsupialdungbucket Good point Also, volcanic rocks might often be too light to be thrown with lethal force
@GeorgeJoubert-id2cv2 ай бұрын
@Adrak-Hiano quartz has a density second to diamond? Ain't no river rocks comparing to igneous rock, maybe basalt and porous rock but not volcanic glass
@GeorgeJoubert-id2cv2 ай бұрын
@@Adrak-Hianohad to Google this now 💀 the reason they didn't throw volcanic rocks is because they shatter when they hit delivering less of the energy to the target, so less effective against armour
@JayM4096 ай бұрын
Now imagine the skill of someone from Rhodes or the Balearic Islands who has practised since childhood. Roman General Paulus was killed by a sling stone in the battle of Cannae. Great video.
@wayneswonderarium4 ай бұрын
I cannae imagine it 🙃
@Amhiel5 ай бұрын
As a Balearic Islander I approve of this video :'D We are still kind of proud of our slinging heritage and some people still practice it for fun and hold competitions regularly. It's a very fun activity to do when going hiking or camping because the sling itself is almost no bother to carry and you can find the ammunition literally lying around.
@david97832 ай бұрын
You SHOULD be proud. I've watched some videos of y'all in competitions, and it is amazing.
@charleslawrence98254 ай бұрын
as a preteen 9-12 I became interested in the sling and made several of different lengths and weights [not woven Balaeric style] I quickly discoverd I could throw a baseball weight stone farther and harder than I could pitch [left handed] and with a lot of practice could hit a wooden target the size of a dinner plate at 40-50 yards with a varieity of stones. Not far for an experienced slinger, but for me it was an amazing experience. Great video!!
@CheekyPseudonym6 ай бұрын
Charcoal covered stone; the beginning of stealth technology
@YurkerYT5 ай бұрын
Now make them angular-shaped so they are not detected by radar.
@cyberingcatgirls70695 ай бұрын
@@YurkerYT 😆🤣😂
@euansmith36993 ай бұрын
Indeed, what a cool detail.
@aragorndedolor4171Ай бұрын
You mean coal. Naturally mined black stones. No need to burn wood to make charcoal...😂
@Enigmaticmuffin276 ай бұрын
backface deformation of a helmet by a heavy projectile like that can kill surprisingly easy, even if theres no visible damage on the watermelon behind
@Jroc35786 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same. The inside of that intact watermelon is probably juice now.
@Archaic-Arms6 ай бұрын
Wearing the helmet before hand, I suspect a tennis-ball slung hard at the helmet would be quite jarring, let alone a stone 7 times the weight…
@prometheus90966 ай бұрын
It's like getting hit by a horse. Or 5 Mike Tysons.
@Jroc35786 ай бұрын
@@prometheus9096 Tysons should be a unit of measurement for impact energy. "This impact was up to 7.5 Tysons...it would have been fatal"
@prometheus90966 ай бұрын
@@Jroc3578 I'm signing that petition. The asteroid that killed the dinosaurs had an impact energy of 1.5 billion mega Tysons 🤣
@ulvesparker6 ай бұрын
I was a big slinger for decades but I injured my shoulder and couldn't continue 😢. But yeah, slings are great. Lightweight, easy to improvise, innocent looking in society, emergency survival tool, totally non-metallic, fun skill to practice, and lots of cheap ammo everywhere. I use one as a hatband on my boonie, and have a frameless as a bracelet in plain sight.
@felix9005 ай бұрын
Did you craft your slings or bought them?
@ulvesparker5 ай бұрын
@@felix900 I made mine. Leather for historic demos, and paracord for more serious slinging. But one of the points was how easy a sling is to improvise. Most of us have 2 or more items that can be made into a sling at any time.
@felix9005 ай бұрын
@@ulvesparker thanks :) looking forward to sling.
@linglingwannabe91353 ай бұрын
if i may, im intending to write a novel which involves the use of slings, but i cant really find any sources on the internet, so i have a few questions would size or mass matter more in slinging? the projectiles my characters use are generally from large stones that they chip to have a sharper edge but smaller mass because 1/2mv^2 would a cone-shaped stone with the diameter of my estimate of a couple inches be good or realistic, since from what ive seen the balearic sling has this slit that's way too big for the stone i have in mind the cone-shaped stone's height is roughly the width of 4 thin fingers. for a female asian hand it would probably fit nicely with the point at the pinky side of the hand
@tinysim5 ай бұрын
The fact they were used for thousands of years is testament to their efficacy.
@pauliewalnuts2406 ай бұрын
This explains why riot police sometimes shoot at people throwing stones. People imagine stone throwing to be fairly harmless but Stones can absolutely be deadly, especially if aimed precisely by a practiced sling user.
@hsaunwtyeerrs6 ай бұрын
Really shows how overpowered armor is being able to increase the survival chance from the glancing blows, but probably working much better against the lighter projectiles. Great video as always
@utubeape6 ай бұрын
the stone would have glanced off onto someone else too in the tight formation that they fought in
@Yora216 ай бұрын
Not sure how severe the injuries would be to a head under the helmet. But I think without a helmet, probably all of those hits might very well be fatal.
@caseyhart99166 ай бұрын
@@CatOnACell Well, yeah, but you're not going to be much good in rest of the fight if you're disoriented and seeing double. Or you can't see to one side at all, because your eye is swollen shut.
@voornaam31916 ай бұрын
Do you know Dutch soldiers bought an American helmet, when getting to countries they were shot at? The Dutch army had slightly older helmets. And the helmets we had during the 80's were known to be not strong enough for modern high energy rounds. That is, when hit straight on, on an angle the bullet gets bounced away. In short, a sniper could kill you, usually you'd get away with it. You need a better helmet, every odd years.
@voornaam31916 ай бұрын
@@Yora21 I'm glad I am not on the receiving end. And I wanna bet there are countries where they still throw stones. Helmets are fun, but the stone always hits your neck, just below the helmet. Or your knee. That is one man down.
@prometheus_beard6 ай бұрын
Glad to have you back man! Slings are extremely useful things 👍
@vicentcampsvilallonga6 ай бұрын
I am from Menorca and I have used slingshots for 30 years, I have competed with slingers from the other islands and I have even participated in one-on-one duels with real stones and I assure you that only hearing the roar of the stone passing near your head, even at Two meters away is terrifying. You are very good with the slingshot and it shows that you have good technique and have worked hard to achieve this precision. 300 guys throwing a pile of 200 gram stones on a battle formation, shooting 4 to 6 stones per minute, would be like having an army of 1500 slingers.
@prometheus90966 ай бұрын
" I have even participated in one-on-one duels with real stones and I assure you that only hearing the roar of the stone passing near your head," Wait are you telling us you did actual duels where u guys tried to hit each others Oo. If so that's not only quiet crazy but outright illegal...
@vicentcampsvilallonga6 ай бұрын
Con 17 años , tienes muchos huevos y poca cabeza y no eran competiciones "oficiales", nos juntábamos algunos amigos y a distancias de 40 ó 50 metros nos apedreábamos usando un trozo de colchón como escudo, lo más grave que vi fue una tibia rota y lo más normal eran fragmentos de piedras clavados en la piel cuando la piedra se rompía al impactar cerca o detrás de tu posición, no disparábamos demasiado fuerte y normalmente veías venir el proyectil dando tiempo a moverte o cubrirte y si no la localizabas , entonces te agachabas apretando los dientes. En una ocasión, en un duelo con pelotas de tenis y sin ninguna protección, en una cancha de tenis , me alcanzaron en los riñones y estuve un par de día meando sangre y con fiebre...burradas
@prometheus90966 ай бұрын
@@vicentcampsvilallonga Oh okay so it was stupid boy plays okay. It sounded like you did actual duels as grown up man u know :D
@robinharwood50446 ай бұрын
He is using a sling, not a slingshot. A slingshot (also known as a catapult in the UK) uses the stretch of rubber to project the stone. A sling uses angular momentum.
@patrickpablo2173 ай бұрын
holy shit
@justajo26 ай бұрын
It was some thirty years ago when I read an article about the value of slingers in ancient warfare. As an illustration, article writer mentioned the story of David and Goliath. Apparently Goliath wasn't too smart, or just plain arrogant. He heaped scorn on David for thinking he could be brought down with a stone. Too bad for him. Anyway, the author said this tale, and that David said he'd killed lions with his sling, served to prove just how accurate a slinger could be.
@david97832 ай бұрын
Goliath would have well known how effective slings were, but he was very arrogant because of his size against a kid. I know David was good with a sling because h'd used one all his life as a shepherd, but I believe God Himself guided that stone to its intended target.
@auerbacher692 ай бұрын
0:38 dude those are some seriously nice rocks
@traviscaines85346 ай бұрын
I've always said; people misunderstand the story. Goliath never stood a chance. Remember Indiana Jones shooting that swordsman in the market? ... That is the story of David and Goliath.
@newtonbomb6 ай бұрын
David was said to be a man after the LORD's own heart, and the Spirit of that same Self-Determined Being is that of Knowledge, Wisdom, Understanding, Counsel, Power, Respect... so yeah, Goliath never stood a chance. It honestly shouldn't have taken a young shepard boy to step up, and the disparagement of the state of the people as well as the contrast against the simple almost mocking solutions of the God they had forgotten is largely the point of that particular story, I think.
@stefthorman85486 ай бұрын
@@newtonbomb except God had nothing to do with it, it's just another story about the will, and skill of man, being used to prop up God
@newtonbomb6 ай бұрын
@stefthorman8548 did you even read what I wrote? What is the will and what is skill?
@WalterRutledge-l9i6 ай бұрын
@@newtonbombNow that you mention it in all the illustrations I've seen of the David v Goliath bout, the Philistine champion has awesome armor, swords, spears,and all the shiniest MELEE weapons ... and the Hebrew contender has this jury-rigged old-timey, aimed, ranged, one-pounder ROCK?!? Yup, Goliath never had a snowball's chance. Davey-boy had him zeroed-in and was "firing for effect" before the big guy could even get moving 😂 !
@Goddot6 ай бұрын
@@WalterRutledge-l9i David is a reformer, confirmed
@TheTrueOSSS6 ай бұрын
I like to consider the number of throwers in battle, how glancing blows off one soldier can impact another, and the probability of striking soft spots. Like you demonstrated, a stone in the right place can obliterate tissues. A video exploring stone skipping with a leg and shield target would be very interesting too!
@qhispillariku58066 ай бұрын
I live in Peru, and here there's a festival every year where villagers make a campal war (keeping the tradition of having real life experience for war). Every year, there's at least one dead and a lot of injured people. Villagers consider it as an offering for mother earth. The point is that I saw the effects of those weapons in real life, and they are deadly. I will go back soon 😉
@molybdaen116 ай бұрын
Old habits die slowly he?
@qhispillariku58065 ай бұрын
@@molybdaen11 I'm not sure if it's better to answer "Sadly yes" or "Sadly no"... Because effectively losing culture and traditions in many cases is a big loss for humanity... In other cases (for example the sexual mutilation in Africa...) in my opinion is a crime. In the case of that festival (the sling's one), who am I to judge!??? People are aware and voluntary.
@molybdaen115 ай бұрын
@@qhispillariku5806 It was meant as a joke. Honestly I am a bit envious because we have not such old festivals here in Europe. Sure, we have a lot of medival stuff but not much where you really go out there and train with a weapon you made yourself.
@qhispillariku58065 ай бұрын
@@molybdaen11 🤣🤣😉 So I suppose that I am somehow a bit intense 🤣😉 But anyway, it's always good to share opinions and facts with people around the world. 💪 I plan to make a KZbin channel in the future to show videos, pictures and share my experiences on many of these cultures and traditions... So if you're interested, it would be a pleasure to have people interested in those subjects too. And if you're really interested in seeing that from your own eyes, I've ended up being a guide, travel accompanist, interpreter... Specialized in those things.
@masonpiper53565 ай бұрын
That is metal. Scary, but metal.
@danieldpa84846 ай бұрын
I really appreciate the fact you approach the topic from a scientific and a practical point of view - these days there are too many historians who could elaborate for days about the topic but are unable to show in practice what it means.
@RabidHobbit5 ай бұрын
Fascinating how the ridge on the helmet successfully lessened the danger of a sling projectile. It makes one wonder if that was a deliberate construction choice.
@alanharnack36406 ай бұрын
Aside from severe headaches, I am sure that most victims would have had many brain traumas.
@slimslamfl6 ай бұрын
And probably more than a few neck injuries.
@firefalcon1006 ай бұрын
considering actual ancient slingers were way more proficient than him (not casting shade), they probably didnt have to worry about having a head ache, because they'd be dead from being hit. I'm sure they'd be way more accurate. I do believe slingers were the most prized and skilled soldiers on the ancient battlefield, and often, shepherds as their day job.
@darthplagueis136 ай бұрын
@@firefalcon100 Situational. I think there's maybe more of a rock-paper-scissors kind of dynamic going on. Slingers would get absolutely butchered by archers who'd be able to deliver deadly and accurate shots at a much greater range, but they'd be more powerful against heavy infantry since the stones they threw were much heavier than arrows and therefore more capable of inflicting harm even when hitting armour, so slingers could see better results skirmishing and kiting than archers. They're also more logistically difficult, because you cannot store them as efficiently as arrows, but at the same time, you cannot always rely on there being a good amount of pebbles that are just the right size and weight for throwing whereever you go. Arrows are more expensive to make, but you can store and transport them relatively easily.
@yeetman49536 ай бұрын
@@darthplagueis13 you can actually throw further than shoot arrows, its because the stone has more momentum
@darthplagueis136 ай бұрын
@@yeetman4953 Gonna heavily doubt that, mate. The stone is heavier, but you don't accelerate it anywhere near as much and it has more air resistance to deal with. For reference: Javelins are a lot more aerodynamic than stones, and the olympic record for a 600 gram javelin is just above 70 meters. A good archer can comfortably double that.
@What1zTyme6 ай бұрын
"Slings and arrows of outrageous fortune." Learned a lot from your work. Well done! Our lot's favorite game, been killing each other forever.. yea, go us
@rgw59916 ай бұрын
his forehead has so many lines, i can read it like a book its fascinating
@jabezriosdesabato16576 ай бұрын
I took my sling up north to the Klamath River and slinged rocks the size of my fist across the river. So much fun! Bless you for sharing the swing and its history
@DefaultFlame5 ай бұрын
And suddenly I'm having a flashback to Fallout 2.
@lozo47454 ай бұрын
This was a good show case. I had always wondered about the slingshots. Side note I have heard if the watermelon stripes are roughly spaced the distance of your pointer and middle finger between. Then it will be really sweet to eat.
@fredford76426 ай бұрын
A VERY good and educational video. I never realized the sling could be so effective. I have played with the sling a lot in my youth, was amazed with it's range, but almost never used a stone of the same weight. Thank you for the video!
@brianvanderspuy45146 ай бұрын
It lends some credence to the story of David and Goliath. I used to be skeptical of the story. A sling is easy to make, and I made one in my teens. But with no amount of practice could I ever achieve even the most marginal of accuracy, so your performance here impressed me to no end. :-)
@ianalexander70826 ай бұрын
I second. This kind of accuracy is very impressive.
@darthplagueis136 ай бұрын
Frankly, the thing about David and Goliath is not exactly that it's not credible, but once you understand a thing or two about slings, suddenly David taking out a relatively large target who is slowed down by a set of heavy and probably quite clunky bronze armour just doesn't seem very impressive anymore. A skilled slinger would have been a much more dangerous opponent for someone like Goliath to fight than just another armoured spearman like himself.
@markbowman28906 ай бұрын
David practised his craft against wild animals while protecting his father's sheep. The idea of using a sling in battle back then was absurd, but he got the chance. I think he chose smaller stones so that he could launch an attack just outside the range of Goliath's huge spear. Accuracy was essential and he hit the target. It did not kill the giant, because David then used the giant's own sword to decapitate him. Isn't it strange that such a violent story is relegated to the children's book shelf. I believe that the battle against Goliath was terribly one sided and the outcome was obvious. A sling hurled a rock like a bullet and guns usually beat spears. This may have been one of the earliest encounters where a slingshot was used in battle. The story was obviously told far and wide because the practise was adopted by many armies.
@ianalexander70826 ай бұрын
@@markbowman2890 while this is speculation as the written record is thin for the period of David's rule and we have comparatively few accounts to include info on slings, the idea that David was the first use the sling in battle seems unlikely to me. The bible doesn't make that claim, which you would think it would if it was so remarkable and we know slings existed at at least 10000 BC. I refuse to believe that for 9000 years people were slinging stones at animals and noone thought 'i wonder what happens if I sling this at a human, en masse, in a fight?'
@markbowman28906 ай бұрын
@@ianalexander7082 For some time the evidence for David was considered to be very thin, perhaps just a legend. That changed with clear evidence arising about David's kingship in Israel. For some reason you seem hesitant to give any credit to the Biblical account, even though it is much more reliable than other documents through that period of history. My reason for suggesting ( be clear with the meaning of that word) that David was an early user of the sling in combat is the reaction given by others in his army and the lack of respect Goliath had for that weapon. It would appear that, in the Middle East at least, they were unfamiliar with men hurling projectiles, lethal ones, against soldiers. Naturally, I am not including other ancient cultures, such as the orientals, who may have had even more lethal weapons at an early period. Rather than speculating, why don't you come with some examples that predate the account of David. You have your opinions but what good are they without some evidence. The Bible does give evidence that a young boy, using a weapon he practised upon while defending sheep, effectively took out a man in battle with the same weapon. If your opinion is true, then explain why no one else in his army thought of using a sling? It would seem that they were unfamiliar with it as a tactic or they doubted their ability to place the rock accurately enough to get a result. Please tell me more about life around 10 000 BC. The further we go back in history, the less records we have. I think you are speculating or accepting stories based upon ideas rather than facts.
@robotlegs6 ай бұрын
Don’t let them see this in London or they’ll be knocking on your door asking for your string permit
@psy-op6 ай бұрын
Lol, they'll be banning string 😂
@Yuki_Ika76 ай бұрын
If you go down Ogre street you might run into the ancestor of the legendary slinger "Barry"
@unclemikecruz6 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim6 ай бұрын
Don't give them any ideas. 😭 You'd be surprised how close they have already come to banning string.
@cal21276 ай бұрын
oi m8 you got a loisconse for that rock!
@sumpfhuhn72666 ай бұрын
Just finished binge watching the channel and now I get even more content! Perfect timing
@danielrose2146Ай бұрын
GREAT video! The accuracy and power of these slings is astounding and your video really highlights both.
@donaldpaterson58276 ай бұрын
David done alright against Goliath using a sling.
@MigratoryWhimbrel6 ай бұрын
Really makes me wish I had been practicing with a sling since I was a child... Always enjoy these!
@josequins90995 ай бұрын
Never too late to start. It would be a great hobby. Cheap, and you can do it almost anywhere.
@bell64466 ай бұрын
Impressive! Thanks for the attention to detail you put into your videos. I really understood what an impact slings had about 3:48 into the presentation. I gained a new appreciation for brutality of ancient combat.
@ohnooooooooooooooo6 ай бұрын
The quality of your slings are incredible. I've made 2 from your guide and they are quite hairy, but perfectly useable! Another great vid.
@dbmail5456 ай бұрын
What are you making yours from?
@Амин-т4х6 ай бұрын
Use lighter to burn it off
@jeremyocassan6 ай бұрын
As a boy I made a sling out of craft leather, leather boot strings, and carpet thread. Nothing felt so powerful as ripping off an egg stone at arrow speeds. My sling was a lot longer than those shown in the video and I used lighter 100g pebbles. But man did they fly fast and far. My one weakness was accuracy. I was amazed by the bullseye shots shown. There must have been a lot of misses. What was the hit to miss ratio?
@scrapbook6325 күн бұрын
"Very popular with re-enactors" 😂😂😂 A very interesting presentation, and I wouldn't like to be your opponent 👏
@shred18946 ай бұрын
Those stones are carrying about the same energy as a .32 ACP bullet. Pretty crazy energy for a dude with some string and a rock.
@edheldude6 ай бұрын
The stone has a way higher momentum. I imagine it could injure or even break your neck.
@garcia83viz6 ай бұрын
A Desert Eagle .50 action express carries the same kinetic energy as a 12 pound bowling ball going 70 mph.
@shred18946 ай бұрын
@garcia83viz A staff sling and a trebuchet operate on the same principles.
@danieldickson85915 ай бұрын
@@garcia83viz And is almost as unwieldy to use.
@garcia83viz5 ай бұрын
?@@shred1894
@maleindividual74376 ай бұрын
How timely, i finished weaving myself a new Egyptian sling and moulding a batch of clay shot an hour ago
@JavierEscuella19116 ай бұрын
I actually got back from a trip where i finished a balearic sling, so i was really happy seeing this before going out to practice 😂
@lyvras6 ай бұрын
glad to have you back after a long break from YT
@slackerpope3 ай бұрын
Great work! I hope you make more. Your attention to detail and free history lesson included in the ballistics demonstration makes for an excellent format. Cheers!
@kristibbradshaw6 ай бұрын
Those glancing blows could definitely ring one’s bell. The head injury could actually be catastrophic.
@motaman80746 ай бұрын
That's some really fine slingin"!
@dbmail5456 ай бұрын
I use mine as a toy. Huge fun but I would hate to have to feed or protect myself with it. Baeleric slinger I am not!
@anruyanshiju6366 ай бұрын
This is why it's a battle of attrition in ancient warfare. Wearing armor and having a shield is tiring and if those rocks keeps coming......either the armored soldier die of heat stroke or actually make it to the slingers position.....in which the slingers have fled. The soldiers then need to eat, then the slingers come back....
@Farabyss6 ай бұрын
And as you said early in the video, from a higher position, the helmet would have received the projectiles more on the top and the brow ridge would have protected the head way less than direct shots. Amazing video (and shots btw ggwp) maybe will try to braid one soon, I will see how it turns out o7
@CaptainBrash4 ай бұрын
So cool, I love the double crack, one on release, one on impact. Must have been pretty terrifying. You've inspired me to have a go at a more traditional Balearic sling so I've sourced some esparto with an eye watering postage to the UK and going to have a go at your tutorial from a year ago! I've made ones out of other materials but never natural fibers but those esparto ones are things of beauty.
@rileymosman28085 ай бұрын
That was great to watch; I've been playing Rome Total War 1 so hearing about Balearic Slingers made me unreasonably excited haha
@tubebw6 ай бұрын
I enjoy watching your videos. I definitely think the sling has really been neglected when discussing it’s importance in historical battles. Your videos are well filmed, informative and entertaining. Please make more.
@Acroballistics6 ай бұрын
Man I was waiting for this
@IronGoober6 ай бұрын
You and me both, buddy!
@dashrendar53206 ай бұрын
Dude this video was amazing, well done and fantastic results. You are a beast
@Archaic-Arms6 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@keefardin6124 ай бұрын
I USED A SLING AS A KID ,I GOT PRETTY ACCURATE WITH IT TOO, AT 150 FT I COULD HIT A CAR TYRE 9 OUT OF 10 TIMES , I NEVER KNEW IT WAS SUCH A GOOD WEAPON AGAINST ARMIES ETC, AND THE AMO IS FREE , I'M 80 NOW AND THINKING I MAY NEED IT AGAIN THE WAY THINGS ARE GOING IN UK,
@insanesdread69016 ай бұрын
think you could do a video with one of the pole sings vs a helm to see how much of a dif it makes having the pole, Great video!
@skatalyst006 ай бұрын
This makes you appreciate the primal aspect of sports, its connection to hunting and combat, and why fans get so excited at a great play, like a strong throw or an amazing catch. We love that it helps us win a game, but we used to love it because it meant we were going to have something to eat, or we were going to get our stolen stuff back 😉
@confuseatronica6 ай бұрын
i understand slinging into a big mass of people, but its just nuts that they can be accurate like that.
@LordVeritas23575 ай бұрын
It appears that Zeke Yeager had a solution for that :))))))
@TheAdeybob6 ай бұрын
those longer slings give out narsty amounts of damage. I shudder to think of the extra impetus a large rock will have at the end of a high parabolic arc
@horscategorie6 ай бұрын
Golf...
@alextomuta798616 сағат бұрын
Great videos. Informative, clear, concise. I can really see you passion in the subject as well. Thank you for the good content.
@bertrandsohier6542Ай бұрын
Very well done and informative, I’m impressed with the agility and precision of your shots. It would be good to have an additional video on the technique of manipulating a sling. Kudos to this excellent video
@timothyandrewausten6 ай бұрын
"Popped his clogs" is a new one for me. It wasn't even included in the Dead Parrot sketch!
@Englishkin6 ай бұрын
Shot from four squads (fives) in platoons (twenties), sling shots (or arrows or flintlock musketry) provide fully automatic shot. When shot and reloaded by ranks, platoons maintain constant shot either by ranks (volleys) or by files (left to right or right to left, as commanded) against the enemy. Hence, "well-regulated" is defined as disciplined drill in formations.
@joshuapatrick6826 ай бұрын
I can only imagine the accuracy of someone who did this every day for decades because what else was there to do?
@mr-x76895 ай бұрын
Probably a hell of a lot more to do than we have today to do. Our lifes today are easy compared to back then. We have infinitly more spare time today than they had back then. Their practice most likely came in the form of hunting birds and other small pray when ever the oppertynity appeared.
@hernerweisenberg70522 ай бұрын
@@mr-x7689 I think work was kinda seasonal for most people back then. Not much to do in winter. Not much to do watching your crop grow. Lots of work harvesting, processing and working the fields sowing the next harvest. But lots of spare time in between that can be used for other stuff. Thats also why they conducted military campaigns when they did. Even named the month march after the roman god of war mars cause there wasnt much farming to do in march, so they had time to opress and raid their neighbors.
@QuantumMechanic_882 ай бұрын
I was a kid of 12 and made a sling . My older brother made a sling as well. Quality stone ammunition was hard to find . My brother began making ammo from cement ,which had a small amount of fiberglass house insulation to hold wet cement together while drying and curing. This was a total game changer and we could make ammunition which was easily 2 pounds. Thanks for your excellent video & All the best.
@mr.mentat.0x4 ай бұрын
At 3:00 , it would be good to explain that bronze is inflexible/brittle metal armor. Bronze inability to flex or return to static state without snapping, is a key benefit of steel, later on Bronze lasts a very long time and forms a beautiful green sheen as it ages. Steel and Iron corod much faster, without proper maintenance
@tophatsurgeon74696 ай бұрын
Whilst the current melon shots do an impressive job of illustrating the damage a sling can do (and are generally fascinating/a delight to watch), i do wonder if the test setup may underestimate a sling's damage? The melon setup isn't attached to a neck and body, and can thus be pushed out of the way by the projectile, absorbing less of it's energy directly. A human head on the other hand cannot snap off of the body, and must absorb a lot more energy directly (whether it's absorbed deforming the helmet/head, snapping the neck, or a combination of both). I don't know how much of a difference that'd make practically, however i'd imagine that it means that a lot less of the projectile's energy is going into the disconnected melon than an equivalent human head would? Again i don't know how much of a difference it'd make, but maybe skewering the melon onto a post may be more accurate to the damage a sling would do to a human head? edited sidenote; but the bouncing projectile throw at 3:43 is very impressive and not something i'd considered possible; either way genuinely impressive, and it's always a pleasure when you upload
@SushiArmageddon6 ай бұрын
I dont think there is a big difference in the absorbed energy whether or not there is a neck. I think the bigger consideration is that even if the watermelon seems unharmed an actual person may suffer brain damage. A direct hit on the helmet might not explode the watermelon but I'm sure it would heavily daze someone at the very least.
@alexc78576 ай бұрын
The sling bullets on the battlefield look quite devastating too at distance against the archers and cavalry.
@Enigmaticmuffin276 ай бұрын
i really love the sling, making them and throwing stones is fun. Unfortunately i am very bad at hitting a target though!
@dbmail5456 ай бұрын
Practice. Practice some more. Did I suggest practice? Slings are fun and this video barely adresses their lethality.
@Grethko5 ай бұрын
I'm so glad you're getting closer to the audience that you deserve these days. Absolutely phenomenal content as always.
@demoadra46614 ай бұрын
What a video, I didn't know what to expect, but, it had everything. Great job man! You brought it to life for all to see.
@BlueEffigy6 ай бұрын
Goliath brought a knife to a gunfight.
@dennyb67686 ай бұрын
3:43 A STONE TO THE STONES! BRUTAL!
@kirstenspencer36306 ай бұрын
Careful folks, slings could just be a " fire arm " and require a license to posess. Very good presentation.
@triumph.over.shipwreck6 ай бұрын
And you would look down at your feet and do what you're told
@jordanwhite3523 ай бұрын
Another fun fact about slinging Stones is we have many cultures, primarily the Greeks also inscribing words on Stones ranging from hello to swear words so that when their opponents got hit they literally were hit by a message. Also, funny to think about that. We probably evolved this ability from the primate instinct to after defecating from shock throwing poop at your opponent.
@dimitristripakis73644 ай бұрын
Years ago I experimented with a sling I made myself from an old bed sheet. It was amazing how far you could throw a 150gr pebble. I was shooting into the sea. After a few shots the sling started to rip apart so I deemed it too dangerous to continue. But you could easily see the lethality of the thing; shooting hundreds of these pebbles into enemy ranks should be devastating if they had no shields, but even if they did it is still very bad for the receiving end.
@TheAces19796 ай бұрын
Dude that was metal af. You're goddamn surgical with that thing haha.
@Unisaur646 ай бұрын
"he need some milk!" 7:38
@Hubert28996 ай бұрын
Sehr schönes Experiment, es zeigt deutlich die Gefährlichkeit kompetenter Schleuderer. Ich bin etwas neidisch wegen dem tollen Strand, wegen dem Mangel an Steinen in meiner Umgebung muss ich mich auf Tonprojektile beschränken. Die Qualität deiner Videos ist mittlerweile sehr sehr gut geworden.
@dearthofdoohickeys4703Ай бұрын
I played around with traditional slingshots a lot as a kid. It’s wild how easy it is to make AND how effective they are. They are absolutely lethal, even just the _sound_ of the rock cutting through the air is impressive. I can’t imagine having to face multiple slingshots wielders who have good aim. Without a good shield you’re just dead.
@Chemanic15 ай бұрын
I’ve been a thrower in track, for shot put they do a spin technique to get a further throw. I’ve used it while slinging and it slings rocks a LOT faster just an idea, it does have an effect on accuracy but I found it interesting and worthy of sharing!
@jonathanlovelace5216 ай бұрын
This was really cool. Idk where you live, but I'd love to see a collab between you and Tod Cutler on bows vs slings.
@Larry-Livermore6 ай бұрын
The sling is indeed a fiercesome weapon. As a boy I made one and with a little practice was able to hurl large rocks almost 100 yards with amazing accuracy.
@cal21276 ай бұрын
xenophon mentions them outranging persian archers
@studenttzanetis47384 ай бұрын
@@cal2127do you mean the persians slingers
@kaliksenna6 ай бұрын
These experiments / demonstrations are an excellent way of getting young students interested in physics and mechanics. Adam Hart-Davis and Tim Hunkin both inspired me to go into Engineering.
@patrickstanley86555 ай бұрын
Really interesting demonstration. Had the stones in the illustration at 3:56 been chipped to make them rounder. The surface texture is really interesting. All the best
@CDale-tc3xz4 ай бұрын
When I was in Somalia in 1992 the local kids showed us how to make a slings using boot laces. With some practice you could become incredibly accurate with them.