Testing 14 arrow Flying quiver by Mihai Cozmei

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  • Опубликовано: 20 апр 2021
  • Testing a new model of Living Arrow Flying quiver:14 arrows in 18,6 seconds from horseback, along a 90m long elliptical track, inside a 40mx20m riding arena.The first 12 arrows were shot in 15,2 seconds, which means a rate of fire under 1,4s (exactly 1,38 seconds)!It's a large size quiver, made with the specific intention of increasing the performances on Tower and Kassai tracks.The quiver is carrying maximum 14 arrows, and can be used successfully also in different competition styles, including the Hunt track (which requires a bigger amount of arrows).Together with this new "secret weapon", the complete technical package for this year is the following:- the Whirling Sword archery technique- Slavic release (three finger pointing draw)- J-Bow Living Arrow TD (made by Jarkko Kaunismäki, equipped with a super fast flight string made by Siem Budding)- light, stiff carbon arrows with heavy tips, equipped with modified large size Koç nocks (from Emrah Koç)- the sweet (and sometimes spooky) Connemara mare Ruusa as my training partner- universal sport saddle, equipped with a light leather pad, made for achieving better stability and ideal shooting position from horseback...Thanks for the video, Katariina Cozmei!
    -Mihai Cozmei
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Комментарии • 25

  • @AlfaRevoluzione
    @AlfaRevoluzione 3 года назад +5

    Looks curios but efficiency

  • @brucenovotny5924
    @brucenovotny5924 2 года назад +1

    Great way of practicing.. be grateful that you can do this…🙏🙏🙏
    🙂👍🇨🇦

  • @kaizen5023
    @kaizen5023 2 года назад

    Love this quiver, looks very easy to reach!

  • @user-so8sm3zs4k
    @user-so8sm3zs4k 3 года назад

    Настоящий талант!

  • @tiobi6633
    @tiobi6633 3 года назад +1

    Nice to have sone new videos again, realy effective way of shooting. I was wondering, is/was there anything like a saddle quiver, since 10-20 arrows seems to be a bit short if we think about that in a perspective of a battle. Sound logical to keep more arrows around, where from one can reload the quiver. Would be great to have an opinion about saddle quivers 🙂

    • @LAHBA
      @LAHBA  3 года назад +2

      We are not doing historical reenactments, but Saddle quiver would be quite untrusted since if you fall from your mount, you will lose all your weaponary... in sport shooting not best option either, I cannot think anyone using it in sports for extra arrows. I cannot say anything about battle situation with 100-200 arrows, we are not doing historical reenactments. :) - Katariina

  • @MILOSLAVJMP
    @MILOSLAVJMP 2 года назад +1

    Obdivuji vaši vynalézavost moderních lukostřeleckých technik, které by vám starověký svět mohl závidět. Chytrý sportovní toulec na šípy, ale pro jeho doplnění o další šípy se asi musí celý sundat z těla nebo to zvládnete sám bez asistence někoho jiného? Děkuji předem za případnou odpověď. Ať se vám dobře daří. Míla Pletánek Czech republic.

    • @brucenovotny5924
      @brucenovotny5924 2 года назад

      Dear Míla, I don’t think they can understand Czech language…

    • @dealkhan312
      @dealkhan312 2 года назад

      Saya guna terjemahan google

  • @snaiwa
    @snaiwa 3 года назад +1

    I don't know much about this type of quiver. Isn't it annoying if you want to shoot to the other side?

    • @cool06alt
      @cool06alt 3 года назад

      You can just reverse it.

    • @LAHBA
      @LAHBA  3 года назад +1

      What do you mean other side?
      We produce it of course also for lefties. In HBA we do not usually chance the bowhand.

    • @snaiwa
      @snaiwa 3 года назад

      @@LAHBA That wasn't my question. If you're on horseback, and you shoot a target on your left side, then one on your right side, isn't it more annoying for one of your two sides ? I mean, it looks like you can't really shoot on the other side.

    • @LAHBA
      @LAHBA  3 года назад +1

      Well, first if all in almost all hba tracks there’s no shooting on the other side only to the same side (Raid, Tower) and in Hunt track usually just one target is ”offside” so I cannot see this as a huge problem :)

    • @snaiwa
      @snaiwa 3 года назад

      @@LAHBA Oh yes, I was thinking more in an historical warfare context, thank you for your answer

  • @MaikTyson5
    @MaikTyson5 3 года назад

    what is this bow LBS?

    • @LAHBA
      @LAHBA  3 года назад +3

      37# at 28", perfect for horseback archery.

    • @MaikTyson5
      @MaikTyson5 3 года назад

      @@LAHBA good. just or this enough for hunting (like example)?

    • @LAHBA
      @LAHBA  3 года назад +2

      @@MaikTyson5 we don’t hunt, so I wouldn’t know. We do a sport called horseback archery and choose our equipment and techniques accordingly 😁 hunting is a whole other world, if I would hunt I would choose a compound with heavy poundage. - Katariina

  • @JohnLundSweden
    @JohnLundSweden 3 года назад

    Add 100 pounds and you might be able to kill a knight lol

    • @LAHBA
      @LAHBA  3 года назад

      We are not playing war or doing historical reenactments, just doing this as an international sport ;-) (I also wonder if they were using 140 pound bows on horse - I have serious doubts and visited number of museums in Turkey and Iran) - Katariina

    • @HistoricalWeapons
      @HistoricalWeapons 2 года назад

      @@LAHBA it’s possible with training

    • @kaizen5023
      @kaizen5023 2 года назад

      1) It's not all about poundage - horsebows with highly recurve tips have higher FPS than English longbows for example.
      2) Knights didn't wear full plate armor all the time, and even a 40-60# bow will shoot through a car door at close range, I know because we used to do it.
      3) Historical mounted archers (Mongolians etc.) did shoot with heavier bows than most modern competitors doing the sport shooting at targets, BUT they did gallop in and shoot at very close range with harassing tactics to wound and demoralize the enemy, so it wasn't even all about "killing a knight" to win a battle.