The crossbow went together quickly and the general fit and finish is a bit above what I expected for the price. ruclips.net/user/postUgkx5B43Qabqt1HedUJyfEqxiwBCfaooIH52 The adjustable stock is a little loose. I had an issue when I tried to cock the bow for the first time with the safety on. The string set in the trap box, held just enough to build up enough tension to rip the string out of my hands when it let go. No significant damage was done, and once I got it sighted in, I wrecked a couple bolts by sending one straight down the shaft of the first. I'm holding ~2" groups at around 50 yards, and I'm not an expert by any means. Best part is that they supply all the replacements parts you may ever need
Just buy a piece of horn next time. Won´t take much longer. Big up for your creativity! The problem with your build and mine before I rebuilt, and with many many modern replicas is the misunderstanding the nut can and should be held in the pin in it´s center. That thru hole is just supposed to let through let´s say a shoelaze.. It will not hold more power. The stored force from the string is supposed to go through the front of the nut and into the casing it sits in. That makes a need for a holder/ casing made of the same material as the nut, in my case elk horn, in your case PCV, metal or whatever that is is enough for the forces in your bow. I built mine like yours and after ten or so shots it started to behave weidly and that was because the placing of the nut had moved.
@@c-ychannel Ok let me know by answeting here if you do. My last comment is crucial for when the draw weights gets heavier. I have 175 pounds in mine and that is the strongest carbon fiber bow I can find. As everything works for mine for lets say 100 shots I will start to look for a metal bow and a goats foot or belt hook. Maybe I will just build another. I use the same way of working with bolts. In that was it can be mounted/dismantled like any modern weapon. My trigger was forged by me when I had the chance once. The shokuno's are so interesting I must try to build one too. You havent missed the slingshot channel?
hey my English isn't best so i didnt really understand why the nut wouldn't work. if you could explain simpler or send me a url to a yt i would be thankful
@@user-ns3th7vv6h Sure thing! It boils down to applying force to the construction. I have 175lb in mine, wich is comparable to some war crossbows from around 1300 after christ. But still my initial through axle that was fitted into the reinforcing metal side plates made them and the nut get dislocated resulting in the string missing the arrow because the nut was pressed downwards. As I shaped the nuts outer curvature with more presicion and let it rest in the equally more precise groove where it sits, I was able to still use the same wood (wood stock ?)) so the forces from the bow that goes into the nut via the string is held up by the front side of the nut but not with help from the side plates. This is how the nut system could be used even in late reneissance crossbows sporting goatsfoot and even crank system, without dislocating the mechanisms from the forces applied. I can send you pictures if you don't get what I describe.
@@ifthebeltiscrackedor um yeah i would like some pictures but if i got it right i just have to make the nut fit precisely and pay attention to the details.
thank you for your comments, crossbow.fandom.com/wiki/Designing_medieval_nut_and_trigger_crossbow_locks?file=Nut_and_trigger_alignment.png This is the picture I used at that time, of course, I made some modifications to it, hope helpful.
Sorry sir, I don’t quite understand what you mean by stopper. If you are talking about the z-shaped structure behind the wheel, it is modified with a bicycle brake lever. If you are talking about trigger safe, it is a spring latch. I bought it at local hardware store. I hope you can find it too.
Tutorialnya sangat bermanfaat...
Heck yeah i made one from weird and it broke under pressure. This will work perfect for my build. Thank you
Good thinking, adding a safety. I hope one day I can build something as awesome as you did.
You can do it! Just keep trying! I can send you plans! I made many cross bows, PVC bows that are awesome and fly really fast and straight
The crossbow went together quickly and the general fit and finish is a bit above what I expected for the price. ruclips.net/user/postUgkx5B43Qabqt1HedUJyfEqxiwBCfaooIH52 The adjustable stock is a little loose. I had an issue when I tried to cock the bow for the first time with the safety on. The string set in the trap box, held just enough to build up enough tension to rip the string out of my hands when it let go. No significant damage was done, and once I got it sighted in, I wrecked a couple bolts by sending one straight down the shaft of the first. I'm holding ~2" groups at around 50 yards, and I'm not an expert by any means. Best part is that they supply all the replacements parts you may ever need
Do you have blueprint with cotation ?
Hai master , what is the type of lock that you used for the safety lock. Is it available online .
व्हेरीगुड आइडिया ब्रदर
Just buy a piece of horn next time. Won´t take much longer. Big up for your creativity! The problem with your build and mine before I rebuilt, and with many many modern replicas is the misunderstanding the nut can and should be held in the pin in it´s center. That thru hole is just supposed to let through let´s say a shoelaze.. It will not hold more power. The stored force from the string is supposed to go through the front of the nut and into the casing it sits in. That makes a need for a holder/ casing made of the same material as the nut, in my case elk horn, in your case PCV, metal or whatever that is is enough for the forces in your bow. I built mine like yours and after ten or so shots it started to behave weidly and that was because the placing of the nut had moved.
Thank you, I think your suggestions are very helpful, I will try to continuously improve the design
@@c-ychannel Ok let me know by answeting here if you do. My last comment is crucial for when the draw weights gets heavier. I have 175 pounds in mine and that is the strongest carbon fiber bow I can find. As everything works for mine for lets say 100 shots I will start to look for a metal bow and a goats foot or belt hook. Maybe I will just build another. I use the same way of working with bolts. In that was it can be mounted/dismantled like any modern weapon. My trigger was forged by me when I had the chance once. The shokuno's are so interesting I must try to build one too. You havent missed the slingshot channel?
hey my English isn't best so i didnt really understand why the nut wouldn't work. if you could explain simpler or send me a url to a yt i would be thankful
@@user-ns3th7vv6h Sure thing! It boils down to applying force to the construction. I have 175lb in mine, wich is comparable to some war crossbows from around 1300 after christ. But still my initial through axle that was fitted into the reinforcing metal side plates made them and the nut get dislocated resulting in the string missing the arrow because the nut was pressed downwards.
As I shaped the nuts outer curvature with more presicion and let it rest in the equally more precise groove where it sits, I was able to still use the same wood (wood stock ?)) so the forces from the bow that goes into the nut via the string is held up by the front side of the nut but not with help from the side plates. This is how the nut system could be used even in late reneissance crossbows sporting goatsfoot and even crank system, without dislocating the mechanisms from the forces applied. I can send you pictures if you don't get what I describe.
@@ifthebeltiscrackedor um yeah i would like some pictures but if i got it right i just have to make the nut fit precisely and pay attention to the details.
Could you please give a link to the mechanism that you downloaded? Thank you.
thank you for your comments,
crossbow.fandom.com/wiki/Designing_medieval_nut_and_trigger_crossbow_locks?file=Nut_and_trigger_alignment.png
This is the picture I used at that time, of course, I made some modifications to it, hope helpful.
This rolling bolt could be made with washers
Stuck together with J B Weld epoxy glue .
Is that your own drawing or did you download and print it. Nice job!
Thank you for your comment, I downloaded it and modified the z-shaped structure
@@c-ychannel Okay thanks!
സൂപ്പർ 👍👍👍
Thank you 🍻
Boss where to buy the stopper from ? Thks
Sorry sir, I don’t quite understand what you mean by stopper. If you are talking about the z-shaped structure behind the wheel, it is modified with a bicycle brake lever. If you are talking about trigger safe, it is a spring latch. I bought it at local hardware store. I hope you can find it too.
creation
Where can I find that trigger safety mechanism at?
It's a small spring door fork, I think maybe you can find it in your local hardware store, good luck
@@c-ychannel ah thank you so much!
it is perfect
thank you😊
@@c-ychannel thx you, will you bring Cross Bow tutorial too?
@@JeffersonAttano Look up Tod's workshop on youtube, he has very useful videos on crossbow making.
No it's not.
It's sloppy and dangerously if it were to be used
Top😎🇧🇷
thank you bro😊👍🍺
വറ്റിന്റെ അളവ് എത്ര
Hai
Pwidi maka bili ng isa
Inverted trigger? Fail
It will not last long.
๐ุ