ARROWS vs ARMOUR 2 - Best metal for Arrowheads?

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Tod's Workshop

Tod's Workshop

Күн бұрын

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@lindybeige
@lindybeige Жыл бұрын
Again - good and useful stuff. Possibly, the biggest difference between case-hardened and softer heads would be the angle at which they would 'bite'. This is a problem in designing armour-piercing anti-tank rounds. A harder AP round will 'bite' into sloping armour and then perhaps penetrate (or shatter), whereas a softer AP shell will ricochet off sloping armour without biting into the surface enough for the weight of the following shell to push it in. Most arrow hits against limbs and rounded torsos of knights would be hitting plate at an angle.
@feryth
@feryth Жыл бұрын
So the obvious next step is testing for penetration against sloped plate?
@Immopimmo
@Immopimmo Жыл бұрын
Looking at how the arrows were deflected by the sloped armor in the tests you'd think it was better if they were hardened, but a skipping arrow has a chance to find a second target instead of biting and shattering on the first one, and maybe this time it finds a weak spot. Remember you're not dealing with a single target on a field, but shooting into groups of people so someone's always likely to be hit. So, maybe that's why there's no evidence of hardened arrow heads?
@feryth
@feryth Жыл бұрын
Except for the steepest angles, all the glancing arrows seems to be damaged after impact, so I doubt they would be keep their lethality when hitting the other armored knights around the actual target. But who knows. That's a test waiting to be done.
@JoramTriesGaming
@JoramTriesGaming Жыл бұрын
Kind of makes one wonder if an APC arrow would function at all, but I doubt man could make an arrow move quickly enough that shatter gap would be an issue.
@lindybeige
@lindybeige Жыл бұрын
@@feryth Yes, I'd be interested to see case-hardened arrows compared with softer ones against plate at a variety of angles. If the hardened ones bit at significantly steeper angles, it would make them much more effective against curving plate armour.
@LuxisAlukard
@LuxisAlukard Жыл бұрын
I would like to say "thank you" to every single person involved in making of these video. From Tod to the lowest kickstarter backer! Every one of you are just great human beings!
@Deipnosophist_the_Gastronomer
@Deipnosophist_the_Gastronomer Жыл бұрын
👍
@TheOnlyToblin
@TheOnlyToblin Жыл бұрын
If there's anything these videos have proved to me, it's that Joe is a goddamn tank. The man's been shooting 160 pound bows for days and doesn't even look like he's breaking a sweat. Man's an absolute archer beast. Thank you all (including backers!) for this fascinating look into the scientific process.
@JevansUK
@JevansUK Жыл бұрын
Imagine what any army of guys who can fire these bows would be like
@heygek2769
@heygek2769 Жыл бұрын
@@JevansUK And even when you finally get through the rain of arrows you're still facing a bunch of English buff boys, professional soldiers, not quite as well trained as knights, but still a big difference to archer levies.
@MeanBeanComedy
@MeanBeanComedy Жыл бұрын
@@heygek2769 I'm overwhelmed with ancestral pride.
@justinturner3959
@justinturner3959 Жыл бұрын
Love seeing Joe shoot. You can clearly see his stance and method is perfected. It's downright violent, impressive ammount of power are put behind those arrows.
@troykuersten2831
@troykuersten2831 Жыл бұрын
Having watched this after the longer main test video one thing I noted from that video that really can't be captured in this head-on test is that the biggest difference between the wrought and case-hardened arrowheads was actually not the penetration directly but the bite. The case-hardened arrows bit more into the angled surfaces and were able to dig gouges and make holes where the wrought iron simply skipped off. Great testing as always, fantastic to watch.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
Thanks and yes a good observation. In our tests the outcome was not different, but I suspect in that marginal area between penetration and not, a hardened arrow had will take the odd shot through where the wrought does not.
@juulmaassen
@juulmaassen Жыл бұрын
It's really interesting to see these results compared to the other video where they shoot at the full armor. In these tests it showed us it doesn't really matter much what the arrowheads are made of. But if you shoot it at plate armor, the case hardened arrowheads really have a better grip on the plate steel allow it to really bite into it. Compared to the wrought iron arrowheads who just bounce off. Just showes you that the kind of test matters to the result you want to get.
@Kholdaimon
@Kholdaimon Жыл бұрын
Yeah, but it also seems to me that we have an answer to why they didn't seem to use case-hardened arrowheads: the effectiveness of the arrow was far more dependent on where it hit than the material the arrowhead was made off. Because case-hardened arrows didn't go to plate, just like the wrought iron, but both went through the mail gaps like with no problem. There might be a bit more grip or bite on the plate for case-hardened arrows, but functionally they performed the same as wrought iron: they didn't incapacitate the knight... So yeah, seems quite clear why you wouldn't spend time and money on case-hardening your arrowheads, you are better off just chucking more arrows at the poor sod...
@ShinPG
@ShinPG Жыл бұрын
@@Kholdaimon I agree, I think it's very likely they did know the process and the effectiveness, and that even the relatively small extra time to harden them wasn't worth.
@XtreeM_FaiL
@XtreeM_FaiL Жыл бұрын
@@Kholdaimon All the evidences of case hardening will rust away over the centuries. The process itself is simple and you can treat thousands of arrow heads in a day, so the cost isn't going to be that much more per arrow.
@calsalitra4689
@calsalitra4689 Жыл бұрын
@@Kholdaimon Case hardening would probably still be worth considering because of the variability of armor quality, bow strength, and distance. As was mentioned in the main video, there would have been stronger armor, and there would have been weaker armor. Case hardened arrows at that range might not beat the armor they were shooting at, but it's possible that case hardened arrows could beat weaker armor they otherwise couldn't, at distances they otherwise couldn't. Add in variation in bow strength/distance and case hardening makes more sense. There was a case hardened arrow that put a hole in the side of the breastplate and another that put a hole in the helmet: if the distance was shorter, or the bow was stronger, would that have pierced? There was a shot to the upper arm that managed to break through in between plates: if the armor was stronger, the bow was weaker, or if the distances were longer, would the arrow need to be case hardened to pierce? Case hardening arrows is cheap and easy to do, and doing so could swing these edge cases into the favor of the shooters. When you have thousands of archers firing thousands of arrows at thousands of knights, making these edge cases turn into lethal hits starts to matter a lot more.
@Kholdaimon
@Kholdaimon Жыл бұрын
@@calsalitra4689 Excellent points, I honestly have no clue how much effort it is to case-harden them, so if you are right and (as another commenter said) time would erase any trace of the process from arrowheads exposed to the elements, it is certainly possible... I guess we will need an Arrows vs Armor 3 with lesser quality historically-accurate plate armor to see if the case-hardened arrows would go through that...
@simonista8976
@simonista8976 Жыл бұрын
Very impressed by what you have accomplished here - especially with Will Sherman for crafting so many arrows of such vatiety for these tests,A-thousand-thanks Will! And Joe Gibbs shooting true as only he can,simply fantastic! These datapoints are so valuable in broadening our understanding of history,not only about the practicality of various materials or the use of them but also the cost-benefit analysis that would have been done by the historical people as well - very,very interesting!
@johnminnitt8101
@johnminnitt8101 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the whole arrows and armour series Tod, I've been looking forward to that and it was even more fascinating than expected. Re arrowhead materials, I know there is no direct evidence for case hardening but I personally don't see any other way to reconcile the evidence for. firstly, the emphasis on steel or steeled heads in documents (as listed in Matt Easton's recent video) and the excavated pure iron heads except to think some at least were hardened and the layer rusted away. It seems likely enough perhaps to try case hardened heads a bit more against the armour, at various angles etc? Also, as a chap who shot longbows in field archery (and made them) for 30 years or so please say hi to Joe for me. I only usually shot about 60-70lbs (that was considered heavy in field archery 20 or 30 years ago) so please convey my admiration for his accuracy with such a heavy bow. Thanks again for these new videos, and your others, your channel is at the top of my bookmarked youtube ones.
@wolfvonversweber1109
@wolfvonversweber1109 Жыл бұрын
Simply amazing work! Thanks to all people participating!
@dmk_games
@dmk_games Жыл бұрын
2 ideas to add: Steel would likely rust away faster which may explain why heads aren't found. I don't know what effect case hardening could have had on preservation or if people even look for it. The harder heads likely matters more when the impact is not perpendicular- similar to spike mace vs round mace. One bites in and transfers the energy into the concentrated point better. Great work on these videos!
@Kanner111
@Kanner111 Жыл бұрын
I think this was mentioned earlier, either in the original video or at some point during the Lockdown Longbow saga. But they're also frustrated because they can't find any evidence at all, no matter what silo (artifacts, sources, art, etc) they search.
@yobgodababua1862
@yobgodababua1862 Жыл бұрын
So interesting after seeing the full test, since this test showed "a little deeper" but didn't capture the improved bite that we saw on the full armor when they weren't always penetrating.
@loupiscanis9449
@loupiscanis9449 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Tod , And thank you to the whole Crew . 🐺
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
A pleasure
@ericmitchell985
@ericmitchell985 Жыл бұрын
I just want to comment that all of you should be extremely proud of this series of films. Everything is just top notch.
@finlayfraser9952
@finlayfraser9952 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Tod, and all of your companions for your efforts here. I was brought up on the myth that the long bow struck right through the French Knight's armour and pinned them to the ground. Having just read Juliet Barker's "Agincourt" it is apparent that such was the torrent, the avalanche of arrow fire, that any vulnerable area could be struck was struck. Archeological examination of the French dead show a large proportion of lethal head and facial wounds, suggesting that incapacitated individuals were finished off by thrusts to the head as they lay in the tangle of men and horses. I did ask previously, what level of protection the horses had. The initial charge was characterised by reports horses maddened by their wounds charging back through their own lines. As Toby alluded to, by the time the armoured knight had become almost arrow proof, the arquebus rendered that armour redundant.
@anomalyp8584
@anomalyp8584 Жыл бұрын
When he says the arrows are identical...my word...those are IDENTICAL. Amazing piece of craftsmanship; the consistency is off the charts. Beautiful arrows, truly.
@adrianstreet8330
@adrianstreet8330 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant and informative. Loving the series. Would have been interesting to see the condition of the various heads after shooting them.
@HereticalKitsune
@HereticalKitsune Жыл бұрын
Great work! Very interesting work, especially with the context of just how well the shaped armor protects more.
@warpdriveby
@warpdriveby Жыл бұрын
I've been a smith/artist for more than 2 decades, and began learning without electricity or belt driven (water) power. Case hardening in addition to being very easy and straightforward uses every day waste materials (hair, bone, hoof shavings, charcoal, etc.,) and can be done passively sitting at the bottom of a fire for hours or days. I've done it many times bringing my antique hammers, swages, hardies etc. back to working condition. A brand new child apprentice could compete a batch with almost no training. All that's to say I agree with Tod, and think it highly probable that many objects were hardened, but the layer is so thin, and so much more readily oxidized that it is gone in decades, while the pieces we want to analyse are centuries old! I don't know what it might be, but I'll bet there is a way to learn a bit more at least. Perhaps testing samples to see whether the carbon in the steel shows isotopic variability and ratios might indicate carbon types its been exposed to, or, does the microscopic structure of what remains indicate that a "skin" has oxidized off? Those are just examples of properties to examine, I don't think it would be that straightforward. Maybe my hope is just wishful thinking dressed up with some science-y verbiage? Any materials scientists out there?
@Kilo6Charlie
@Kilo6Charlie Жыл бұрын
What I find really quite cool is the sound of the impact. I think it's the reverb as the steel plate suddenly collapses against the backing, but it sounds on video very much like how gunshots sound on video
@hamshackleton
@hamshackleton Жыл бұрын
It might be of value to examine how much head deformation there was after striking the target. (edit - I see that philsie had the same idea!)
@DraconianEmpath
@DraconianEmpath Жыл бұрын
a good point. ideally, the arrow head isn't re-usable by the person you shot it at
@marcwilson1052
@marcwilson1052 Жыл бұрын
Good idea. Wonder about the relative difficulty in repair, as well?
@vivianevans8323
@vivianevans8323 Жыл бұрын
That was another hugely informative preliminary test - the work going into the 'actual test' is outstanding. And it's a great joy watching Joe shooting all those test arrows.
@BlackCat-tc2tv
@BlackCat-tc2tv Жыл бұрын
I would love to see tests shooting at a plate at increasing angles just to get an idea of the effects of deflection. Great videos and a fascinating series!
@Theaddekalk
@Theaddekalk Жыл бұрын
I JUST TSAW ONE VIDEO AND GOT NOTIFICATION FOR IT, THEN IT JUST POPS UP MORE AND MORE ADN MORE, THIS IS A GREAT DAY TO BE ALIVE !
@SamBrownBaudot
@SamBrownBaudot Жыл бұрын
A quick definition of the materials Tod mentions, around the 1:15 mark: "Wrought Iron" is a more primitive form of iron. If you melt iron ore down to iron, but don't do much else, wrought iron is what you end up with. Compared to other forms of iron and steel, it's softer and more flexible. Mixed in with the iron is usually silica or other impurities from the smelting being less than precise. This has some advantages (like, it can be "hammer welded") but for our purposes the main thing is, this is cheap, primitive, soft iron. "Case hardened" iron is iron that has been heated inside a sealed case together with a source of carbon, and left hot (but not melted) for an extended time. The carbon leaches into the outer layer of the iron, making it more steel like. Specifically, this makes the surface harder, where carbon has cooked into the iron. But it doesn't harden it all the way through, so it doesn't become brittle. "Bloomed" steel is steel that has been made by an early medieval process. If you like documentaries like this, you might like seeing "Secrets of the Castle", episode four. About 15 minutes into that one, you get a demonstration of "blooming" steel in the medieval way. It's a labor intensive process, so much so that steel didn't really become affordable until other methods of getting that iron + carbon mix at high purity were invented. "Mild steel" is what we call common everyday not-stainless steel made in the modern way. If you go down to your local metal supplier and ask for steel, you might end up with mild steel. It's the cheap but basically good stuff.
@stuartburns8657
@stuartburns8657 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for that Sam 👏
@kanonierable
@kanonierable Жыл бұрын
I'd like to add that it isn't just the additional work that makes anything above wrought iron more expensive but also the fact that much more charcoal is necessairy to produce the better qualities, and the wood to produce that charcoal is not something that is available in unlimited amounts in the late middle ages, when entire forrests were cut down to build ships, houses etc. aside from being consumed as burning fuel in households and workshops. Cheap, readily available energy is a relative modern phenomenon and a luxury that we are just now becoming more aware of...
@justskip4595
@justskip4595 Жыл бұрын
I was about to go to sleep, youtube recommended one of these for me and now I have 1 video left to watch after this. Fantastic stuff.
@randallaverty4514
@randallaverty4514 Жыл бұрын
This is most informative. I had not taken into account the production time. I noticed that regardless of materials the hits in the centre of the plate went deeper than the ones near to the frame. Perhaps a larger plate or tests about the effect of near to frame hits that would be reinforced on one or two sides would be appropriate.
@paavobergmann4920
@paavobergmann4920 Жыл бұрын
I remember that somewhere towards the end of the Swiss "Feuerwerkerbuch", they are talking about some obscure process to treat arrowheads, it includes some herbs known as "iron herb" in germany (vervaine), and I wonder if that, read by someone who knows about that stuff, could indicate some form of case hardening, at least in the late 1500´s, at least for some arrowheads.
@hunnybunnysheavymetalmusic6542
@hunnybunnysheavymetalmusic6542 Жыл бұрын
As a machinist and an engineer, case hardening is a technology long used to make tougher, more durable product, because the very hard surface is supported by a very tough, fracture resistant core. Also, technically, since you can finish harder metals to a smoother, finer finish, this can mean less drag in the metal-on-metal contact, meaning that the smoother finish loses less energy to drag, meaning there is more energy left over to penetrate the target more deeply. While they CAN some times be a little too brittle and chip, [which might have happened on the one with the shorter 9 cm depth] if one 'draws back' the finished case hardening AFTER grinding and polishing, they should still maintain an excellent surface hardness AND a superior surface FINISH, but now with more chip resistance, so that they have the best possible combination of hardness, smoothness and toughness anybody at that period of time could have achieved [essentially, a skin of 'spring steel', or very near unto it, but without the extreme expense]. Indeed it is a shame we have no way to test this, especially since the case hardened skins of the heads, often only a few thousandths of an inch thick, are simply not going to be able to last that long in any non-preserved type setting. Even sweat and body acids from one's fingertips will corrode away the case hardening over time.
@_B_K_
@_B_K_ Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this incredible series. This is a gem.
@nfisheremti
@nfisheremti Жыл бұрын
i love this series. i do have some questions that you may or may not know the answers to: 1. was the weight of the arrows any different between types? 2. did Joe notice any difference in how the arrows shot? 3. is there any evidence that mediaeval armorers did any systematic testing of armor, arrows, mail, etc? or was it all anecdotal, and battlefield outcomes?
@rayq1234
@rayq1234 Жыл бұрын
Keep on rolling! Thanks for your time and effort :D
@garychynne1377
@garychynne1377 Жыл бұрын
excellent demonstration
@PpAirO5
@PpAirO5 Жыл бұрын
Love these in depth and serious tests.
@thcdreams654
@thcdreams654 Жыл бұрын
I could watch this content all day. Thanks so much to you and the rest of the crew.
@scottv6903
@scottv6903 Жыл бұрын
Thanks again for all the work you have put in! Seeing not only the main video but all the other testing is just a really awesome educational experience.
@greghenrikson952
@greghenrikson952 Жыл бұрын
I'm going to do some testing of my own to see if results change with *sharp* leading edges on the heavy bodkins. Like a slight hollow grind.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
I think the Romans did this on triangular heads
@simonlarsson2610
@simonlarsson2610 Жыл бұрын
For a future video I would encourage you to make a video where the steel plate target is set at an angle somewhat equivalent to the average curvature of a "standard" breastplate from the same historical era. Since all the arrow types penetrates the steel on the target, then the depth of penetration is just a function of the kinetic energy (which is about the same for all of them). In the longer main video, the biggest difference between the different arrowhead types was how well it "bit" into the curved armor. Thus a test with an angled target would show weather or not the different arrowhead types makes a difference on the ability to bit into a target to be able to go through the armor and then penetrate further into the target. Super video btw :)
@TheKerberos84
@TheKerberos84 Жыл бұрын
I remember a Discussion with a Metal Master, he told me. In the past they used straw to up carbon the surface when forging something. Maybe they used it in the medieval time, straw was there in abundance.
@karisvenner3892
@karisvenner3892 Жыл бұрын
I've also heard that they used horns, rubbing it against the red-hot steel to deposit carbon onto the surface
@GianmarioScotti
@GianmarioScotti Жыл бұрын
The issue in your methodology is that you are essentially measuring penetration in the backing material (which I didn't catch whether you mentioned it or not, but it seems to be some sort of dust?) and not the thin metallic diaphragm, which is easily defeated by all arrows regarding of arrowhead material. Penetration in that dusty backing material seems to be equally independent on arrowhead material - it's not the hardness of the arrowhead that determines the penetration depth but the energy of the arrow, which is presumably similar between shots.
@andyedwards9222
@andyedwards9222 Жыл бұрын
I agree. The material test may be be somewhat flawed. If the arrows are easily penetrating the metal, then it increasingly becomes a measure of foam penetration and edge retention on the arrow head. Would it be possible to repeat but with increased metal thickness?
@JohnMcKLV
@JohnMcKLV 4 ай бұрын
I believe the idea is that the different materials use different amounts of energy to get through the steel. Which makes sense - the harder the head is, the more energy is conserved in the steel plate phase and the deeper it penetrates.
@ronaldramirez5601
@ronaldramirez5601 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for all your hard work!! Love this series
@peezebeuponyou3774
@peezebeuponyou3774 Жыл бұрын
Enjoying these videos. It could be that archers of the day were looking at other factors aside from solely arrow penetration. Many arrows were reclaimed on the battlefield- would the case-hardened variety be more reusable and so, in the long run, possibly less costly anyway? Just throwing this out there.
@seanbrown207
@seanbrown207 Жыл бұрын
I wouldn’t have thought wrought iron with case-hardening would have been superior. I would have thought the mild steel would be the winner. Fascinating!
@KOOnix159
@KOOnix159 Жыл бұрын
Outstanding job mr Gibs. So many arrows form such a havy bow , your shoulders and your back must be killing you. For such a great archer , just round if applause it's not enough. Can't wait to see you more on the channel
@liamjohnston2000
@liamjohnston2000 Жыл бұрын
With regards to the case-hardened arrows, for the first one that was shot (second one measured), I noticed immediately after it hit that it was at an angle. So, when the arrows were being measured, I paid specific attention to which one was which and I was not at all surprised that it went in much shallower than the other two. This could mean that, all things being equal, the case-hardened arrows were actually even better than what was shown with the averages. I don't mean it as a criticism, it's just something to think about.
@oneshotme
@oneshotme Жыл бұрын
Another great video Tod and I'm off to watch the last one
@l3nn0x
@l3nn0x Жыл бұрын
10:03 And so, the legendary Framearmor was born
@ApfelJohannisbeere
@ApfelJohannisbeere Жыл бұрын
Such an amazing baseline, thank you for getting that knowledge!
@gfreeman9843
@gfreeman9843 Жыл бұрын
Archery is so interesting.. always more to learn.great fun and it keeps strength up.. could also put food on the table ..
@erikjrn4080
@erikjrn4080 Жыл бұрын
Wow, you guys aren't messing about with these tests! I've seen the main and three of the supplemental new tests, now, and every minute of wait for this "sequel" has been worth it! Something about arrows just struck me (sic!): With what precision do we know the relationship between the width of the arrow head vs. the arrow shaft? While it's probably small, in relation to piercing steel, the subsequent friction between the wood and plate may have measurable effect, especially considering that it lasts for >10 cm, and may be enhanced by vibration. Potentially, even a small reduction of the shaft width might reduce friction, and allow deeper penetration. I know that it doesn't matter relative to the main test, but testing absolutely all variables and their combinations is impossible, so knowing the specifics of each that is tested is interesting, with thought to extrapolating (which will just be guessing, regardless, but guesses can be better, or worse). Jeez, talking about this, without sounding dirty is absolutely impossible. I might as well be writing porn... I can certainly see how Matt (scholagladiatoria) got started on his descent into the underbelly of the English language. ;-)
@chanman819
@chanman819 Жыл бұрын
I recall an earlier series waxed arrowheads and aside from waterproofing, the lubrication also improved penetration by a fair bit. I wonder if the different arrowhead materials would affect the degree of improvement, or if the change would be mostly uniform.
@AnotherDuck
@AnotherDuck Жыл бұрын
I wonder if waxed arrowheads would affect the angle it bites. I'd think it wouldn't have too much effect since it still strikes with the point, but I'd rather not assume.
@chocksaway100
@chocksaway100 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video thanks for making.
@rugratrik
@rugratrik Жыл бұрын
Hey Tod, didn't you do a test a couple years back, about wax being put on arrowheads, in order to increase their 'bite'? (Might have been Joerg Sprave) Would be an interesting added factor, especially with the hardend heads.
@greenmachine1987
@greenmachine1987 Жыл бұрын
Great work! I have a few thoughts on this, the take away seems to be that the material didn’t matter, all arrows penetrated about the same, but I don’t this this is the whole story. All arrows carry the same kinetic energy, so as long as the head is able to maintain its shape on impact, it will punch through using about the same amount of energy, thus will sink about as deep. It’s an all or nothing proposition. Had you repeated this series of tests on increasing grades of armor plate, at some point you will find that the softer heads will deform and will not penetrate at all, whereas the harder ones will still punch through. Essentially, I don’t think it matters if the head is a little bit harder than the armor, or a lot harder, if it’s hard enough to go through, it’s going through. And if not, it won’t. The value in the hardened heads is not improved penetration on soft armor, but the ability to penetrate higher grade armor that the softer heads would simply bounce off of.
@Sirsethtaggart3505
@Sirsethtaggart3505 Жыл бұрын
This series of films are the best, on this subject, I have ever seen.
@SpecOp1987
@SpecOp1987 Жыл бұрын
Total legit Testing! Thank you!
@TheNetsrac
@TheNetsrac Жыл бұрын
Very intersting video. Thank you to all involved in making this
@Cap_Olimar
@Cap_Olimar Жыл бұрын
These are great! Getting results as accurate as possible with limited funds.
@philsie
@philsie Жыл бұрын
Would be interesting to compare the arrowheads afterwards to look for differences. Could be that the case hardened had enough softness behind them to allow some deformation while maintaining the hard penetrating tip.
@3eightiesopinion524
@3eightiesopinion524 Жыл бұрын
I think they do
@markfergerson2145
@markfergerson2145 Жыл бұрын
Having watched these videos in reverse order, it appears that once shot an arrow is more likely to shatter its shaft or get stuck in someone rather than remain usable say by missing and hitting dirt. The hardened points that do hit armor either break or deform into unusability.
@3eightiesopinion524
@3eightiesopinion524 Жыл бұрын
@@markfergerson2145 i think the deformation may cause greater wounding capability depending on the alloy used. It maybe minor as you are getting hit with a .50 arrow. But a wrought iron shaft may mushroom more while a hardened tip may penetrate more.
@harlech2
@harlech2 Жыл бұрын
Really great video! I really enjoyed the time I spent watching it and I learned a lot more than I thought I would. As an aside, dude needs to get his eye fixed before it becomes a serious problem. It looks like a calcified stye. The issue is that they can become infected and being that close to his eye, it's an issue. The procedure is quick and easy.
@EricBohm
@EricBohm Жыл бұрын
Great video! Would have been slightly better on a technical level to double blind it, so that the archer and those taking the measurements didn't know which head was which, until you look up the number afterwards. That helps to rule out effects from unconscious bias. Not sure if it would have been as good a video that way, as the batch by batch dialogue really made for a nice rhythm.
@adrianjenkins58
@adrianjenkins58 Жыл бұрын
excellent stuff, replacing the steel sheet each time, makes the results more consistent
@rpontonjr
@rpontonjr Жыл бұрын
Well done! It might not be worth the effort, but I can't help but wonder if the result would be different with less backing material. Once the head pierces the metal, extra hardness is largely wasted and it's all about surface area and friction against the backing material and shaft. What if you compared more against different thicknesses of metal and whether they were punctured cleanly at all, rather than how deep the arrow went? Also, to puncture armor, I would think you want the tip to be as narrow as possible without deforming. Therefore, would steel tips allow for a different geometry with better penetration? Since this would likely affect the entire design of the head and even the shaft, it may have been even more expensive and still not worth it unless it punched through armor like butter.
@wacko031290
@wacko031290 Жыл бұрын
Love everything to do with this series, very interesting to watch! If I were to make a suggestion though, I would have staggered the release of these mini films across the few weeks before the main film was released. These would have provided a lot more context if I'd watched them before. Gets people hyped up for the main video
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
Yes I agree - we made a mistake in how we released them I think - live and learn
@johnjapuntich3306
@johnjapuntich3306 Жыл бұрын
What an awesome video! Thanks for all of the hard work you guys obviously put into this. My question is about the arrowheads that were found/used at the battle of Agincourt, so called "plate cutters" or duck billed heads. What you have demonstrated is that these arrowheads do not effectively penetrate plate armor, especially the breast plate and helmet. I think one penetrated the shoulder armor but the vast majority of the lethal or disabling blows were in the gaps in the plate armor where the only protection was mail and fabric armor. So, it seems that the archers of the time would have been targeting these areas of their opponents. So, why weren't they using needle bodkins instead? We know or at least we think we know that needle bodkins outperform all other arrowheads against mail armor..
@nicholasmeisner4463
@nicholasmeisner4463 Жыл бұрын
Great videos on arrow vs armor 2 and I love the collaboration and the discussion. I'm hoping these are a huge success so we don't have to wait too long for arrows vs armor 3.
@Kanner111
@Kanner111 Жыл бұрын
I gotta concede that this video does make a pretty strong 'case' for hardening the arrowheads. Two out of three shots being substantially better than anything else on the day is pretty significant. Also it just works like that elsewhere, e.g the cutting edge of a sword benefits from being a bit harder and denser than the rest of the sword. And the rest of the blade can be substantially softer (and hence, less brittle)! So the question 'why wouldn't an arrowhead work like that too' seems to have been answered a little here. (The other question, 'but is it actually enough to make a real difference' is still pretty compelling, though. 10cm of arrow sticking into of any part of you is pretty much exactly as bad as 12-13cm of arrow sticking into any part of you - in that it's worse, probably, but both scenarios are already well past the threshold for a really bad day.)
@AnotherDuck
@AnotherDuck Жыл бұрын
There more I see of these tests (I still have a couple of vids left), the more obvious it is how many different aspects play into the results, but also how wildly different they affect them, or not. Like several people mentioned, the arrowhead material doesn't matter that much for penetration, but much more for bite angle. Without all these tests, we wouldn't know. Though from this test in particular, I find that one of the most useful findings is that modern mild steel is a very reasonable substitute for wrought iron. It makes testing easier if you can use modern methods and materials that lower costs. Not that I'm familiar with such production costs, but having alternatives are always better than not. It was interesting to see how pointless it was to use bloomery steel instead of wrought iron considering how much harder it is to make. All in all, a relatively simple test, but that doesn't mean it's not worth it. Far from it; it makes it easier to learn from it. It's easy to get too greedy when testing and try to find out too much at the same time, which results in losing reliability and readability in the results.
@1977ajax
@1977ajax Жыл бұрын
In seeming contradiction to the comments below talking of harder steel 'biting' better:- Thinking of a TV program I saw 40 or more years ago as a lad. Man was shooting a crossbow at a WW2 steel helmet, and the bolts glanced off every time. He then put a ball of wax (about 3/4 " dia?) onto the bolt head and fired again - they then split the steel and penetrated. I assume the soft wax prevented the bolt tip from skidding / glancing off, held it in place for some micro-second, and thus permitted its energy to be transferred to the target fully. A test worth Tod / Joe repeating?
@CChan11
@CChan11 Жыл бұрын
All of this is of course super cool to see and I’m sure took a lot of time and effort to get set up. I think if you really wanted to make an experiment that eliminates all undesirable variables, you’d have to make some sort of really expensive fixture that can consistently deliver the same kinetic energy to a steel plate. Then you could introduce the different arrow heads to that fixture and even then you’d probably have to do at least half a dozen runs per arrow head type to eliminate outliers. This is not to detract from y’alls experiment. All craftsmen and the archer did an awesome job.
@fastlingo
@fastlingo Жыл бұрын
The difference in material is related to how much the steel resists deformation. If the head is deformed (because the steel is soft) a lot of the energy of the arrow will go into bending the tip instead of penetrating. So maybe the test should have been done with thicker plates to allow these differences to be more visible, it seems to me that the difference in these materials appears when the plate thickness is such that the soft heads stop penetrating and maybe the hard heads will still penetrate.
@zavi3rz
@zavi3rz Жыл бұрын
Would love a colab between this channel and the slow mo guy, just to see how the arrow penetrates the armor plating on hyper slow mo.
@Elendalar
@Elendalar Жыл бұрын
This archer is bloody amazing!
@timj5031
@timj5031 Жыл бұрын
Great Testing.Honestly I think they made the heads out of Iron to make them glance off. This also explains the shape of them best. How do you keep an edge on soft metal? make it a blunt angle. Same goes for making them glance off.
@Joe___R
@Joe___R Жыл бұрын
As other tests have shown that case hardened arrow heads work much better on curved armor than regular wrought-iron. I would imagine the steel arrow heads would perform similarly well if they were not tempted back much, if at all. I also believe steel arrow heads in the mideval period were mostly wrought-iron with only the tip a piece of steel that was likely simply quenched but not tempted. This was the common way to use steel up until the industrial revolution.
@Alastair510
@Alastair510 Жыл бұрын
How does the tip end up being steel?
@rafaellastracom6411
@rafaellastracom6411 Жыл бұрын
Congratulations to all involved in this series, just wonderful work. What a treat!
@pvtbadtouch6540
@pvtbadtouch6540 Жыл бұрын
How would an untempered bloomery steel head compare? Arrows aren't going to be retrieved in a battle and absolute hardness might be preferred to the durability of tempering. It would also remove a process and reduce the time to produce the head
@M.M.83-U
@M.M.83-U Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the work.
@DrVictorVasconcelos
@DrVictorVasconcelos Жыл бұрын
When doing statistical analysis, given the "shot quality" variable, I'd do a 68% cutoff *here*. That's one of the reasons you need a bigger sample; then you could do a 95% cutoff. But at the effect size here--which I estimate at a Cohen's _d_ of about 1.5, it'd probably be about 15 shots each group, to get at least 10 reliable shots to reach a nice 90% statistical power in order to really be able to find if the _p_ < .05. Just PM me if you need some _pro bono_ statistical/research design work, Tod. This is pretty easy stuff that I'd do in a couple of hours during breaks at work.
@elchinodecai
@elchinodecai Жыл бұрын
First, great video (s) I'd like to say something, materials behave differently when confronted, so I think it'll be very interesting not only testing those different types of arrowheads to each other, but against different armours, I mean, different kind of metals (targets) and the shape of the armour.
@paavobergmann4920
@paavobergmann4920 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely fascinating. I would have guessed differently.
@robertshell4176
@robertshell4176 Жыл бұрын
Really fun series but I think it's incredibly valuable information and very well put together.
@esmelusina4313
@esmelusina4313 Жыл бұрын
Super curious for the third installment- it would be amazing to see 3 different sets in a unit against a volley of arrows at terminal velocity (arched and then falling). The simulation here is super interesting, but as formations they would have been hailing incoming forces before they would be barraging. The straight shot scenario is much easier to control for testing, but being able to do some odds calculation with regards to the likely number of volleyed and straight shots an average knight was experiencing we could have a statistical analysis to work with. Though uh- I’ve heard popular theories that the mud and approach incline for the horses exposed them to arrow fire, leaving them stuck in mud and severely compromised by battlefield conditions- I’m curious if it would’ve been a possible feat without that.
@robertcanet9928
@robertcanet9928 Жыл бұрын
I've watched all the arrow vs armor videos, I've noticed all of the arrows that break, break at the hinge point where metal meets wood. If you wrap the head area in sinew like the first 3 or 4 inches of the shaft under the cone of the head itself, you will add a ton of strength in that area. This is definitely a technology they would have, sinew wrapped arrowheads have been used since the Stone age. Might be that little bit extra you need to start punching through armor I don't know might be worth a try.
@dan_the_dj
@dan_the_dj Жыл бұрын
Amazing! Not sure in which order to watch, so I started here. Interesting results so far. However,given your targets were mild steel, it would be interesting yet to see this same test, but with also having different irons or steels for the targets as well. As having a harder arrowhead might be necessary for harder armor plates? Who knows, eh...
@mansfieldtime
@mansfieldtime Жыл бұрын
Just something to add bullets today are made of coper, lead and or steel. Even then only the armor piecing have hardened steel the rest are a soft steel. So not only are your arrows heads working similarly to bullets, they also seam to have a comparable effect on armor.
@salvadorsempere1701
@salvadorsempere1701 Жыл бұрын
This serie it´s raising a new bar in quality for historical videos. And make the reason about why all the arrowheads found to be made from wrought iron. 10.2 penetration of the cheapest process, 11.7 of the best, more expensive, was not deemed worth the diference.
@billysmith3841
@billysmith3841 Жыл бұрын
Received my Messer thank you Tod it's beautiful. Brilliant videos love it
@metanga1223
@metanga1223 Жыл бұрын
I think the results can be within the variable among archers and their bow strength in an army. Therefore in practice, cheapest wrought iron would be the best for arrow heads in massive quantities. The experiment was very interesting.
@adrianelliott5555
@adrianelliott5555 Жыл бұрын
It actually makes sense that there would be little difference with the same quite blunt arrow head. I would imagine though that with a steel head a thinner point could be made. Possibly allowing an arrow with more destructive ability with a similar penetration, but overall probably still not worth the expense.
@aaronroberts6684
@aaronroberts6684 Жыл бұрын
Next experiment can you put at layer of chain mail between the steel and the foam, and for fun shoot Kevlar? And maybe do a nickel coating on some similar to a metal jacket?
@JohnLundSweden
@JohnLundSweden Жыл бұрын
Love it as usual, should try Arrows vs Guns part 2 also try with waxes arrowheads and for fun, one with a modern armor peircing arrows.
@uncletiggermclaren7592
@uncletiggermclaren7592 Жыл бұрын
"We need another set of tests . . ." 😂😂😁 But, no, seriously, hear me out. :P We do need another set of tests with highly polished ( I mean half an hour each on the buffer ) and waxed arrowheads.
@kbilsky
@kbilsky Жыл бұрын
I have experience in experimental archeology and metallurgy, and I have some points and questions about these great tests. About materials - bloomery iron can be soft as wrought iron, carbon content could vary up to even 1,5% or even more. It is very hard to controll bloomery proces in order to gain material with specific carbon content, or even impossible. Bloom from one furnace can have in one point 0,3%C and in other over 1%, or can be quite uniform. Laminating bloom to get it more uniform reduces carbon content significantly. For example, there are many examples of swords made in roman peroid, there are mostly made out of bloomery iron of low carbon content and sometimes case hardened. In fact many (if not the most of them) medieval swords are made out of soft bloomery or wrought iron and case hardened. About technology of making arrowheads - even these ones from wrought iron should be hardened (quenched) in cold water, and without tempering that process can raise hardness significantly. Or, points of arrowheads can be in final stage smitted on cold, and not heated again - cold smithong also increases hardness significantly, it is certain that in roman peroid that technique is known, edges of swords made out of soft bloomery iron without case hardening was treated in that way. Technique of making sockets is also important, welded ones are ofc stronger, in tests against plate armor we can see that some of sockets gets flared out by a inertia of arrowshaft, it means that quite a lot of energy is wasted to deformation of socket. Welded ones certainly transfers more energy to the target. And, I am quite dissapointed that you do not use waxed warrowheads for comprasion :) Thanks for making this awesome tests, it was great pleasure to watch them. I am curious how much fatigued was Joe after so many shots ;)
@MedievalArrows
@MedievalArrows Жыл бұрын
Excellent comments! Just to clarify a few issues - the arrowheads that I made in wrought iron were indeed water quenched, and the sockets were made exactly as per the original museum items - they weren't found welded, but simply overlapped and this is how our test heads were made. It's extremely rare to find late medieval arrowheads with welded sockets, they just didn't seem to bother with it! It's another example of what we consider common sense not being used in favour of speed and mass production.
@yendub
@yendub Жыл бұрын
I know you did it for accuracy, but I'd love to see some shooting at greater distances. Maybe it isn't about pure power, maybe a variable is distance and retained energy.
@ramoverde4133
@ramoverde4133 Жыл бұрын
Great! Nice shooting. How far away is the target ? 🏹✔👍
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
For our tests 15m, too close for reality, but the speed drop off to 50m is not much - film coming
@stormiewutzke4190
@stormiewutzke4190 Жыл бұрын
Like with the last test I like this but I feel like by taking out shaping and the ability for the armor to flex you take out a major piece of data or at least something that may be a major piece of data. The way that I am reading this is that at close range unhardened armor could not block arrows. We already know that shape was used to try to shed blows and that's why I feel like compared to a finished piece of armor used in the first test this is leaving a lot of questions out there. It would be more work but you could make your fixture hold at least a single radius and give it an air gap to work with. At least a trial could be mocked up to see if results change. The foam backer could be radiused to be uniform with the gap. I'm not sure what the preservation is like on arrowheads. Depending on how much effort is put into it case hardening tends to be extremely shallow. It would not be hard to have the high carbon sections oxidize off. A major disadvantage is that it probably becomes a single use improvement. If the heads were carefully stoned it might be possible to resharpen them a limited number of times. I would be interested in knowing what the tips of those arrows looked like. You might find it interesting to carefully repair them and then etch to see if you are though the carbon yet. To go along with that even the first sharpening would be difficult to do without damaging the head. As they are something that requires mass production and shipping I would think they would require maintenance. I believe that sharpness even with soft materials does play a part especially when dealing with fabric as well. Steeling could involve something like a bit of hardness steel being added. A small hole being punched into the tip and filled with a small piece of high carbon wire could be a way. It could deliver an imperfect forge weld while still being done on mass and at low cost. Since it's not written and anything small and high carbon will rust much faster than wrought iron it's probably going to forever remain a mystery.
@Aliyah_666
@Aliyah_666 Жыл бұрын
I know they probably never did this back in those times but imagine if they had a longer metal collar or maybe a metal sleeve down the first 3 or so inches of the arrow shaft after the head. Like a steel or wrought iron wrapped around sleeve plus a good case hardening for the tip and the sleeve would increase penetration. Less friction on the arrow shaft so when and if it does penetrate armor it keeps going further in. Maybe even greased the tips.
Жыл бұрын
Again. Brilliant stuff.
@lynnm6413
@lynnm6413 Жыл бұрын
Great video, and I love the passion of all the guys….thanks to the kickstarter-backers, too! To make this even more scientific I would blind the Archer and the others besides the Arrowsmith to the material so that the human factor can be limited more…. I just found this channel and am going to binge these videos…so looking forward to that tonight
@leoscheibelhut940
@leoscheibelhut940 Жыл бұрын
Thank you to everyone involved and to the kickstarter patrons. Like you all, I strongly suspect that "steeled" meant case hardened, but as you have correctly pointed out, there is no written evidence.
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