Ballista Development through History

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  • Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 25

  • @rowgler1
    @rowgler1 10 месяцев назад +1

    Bravo! A most excellent and comprehensive video on the subject. Very nice working model. Thank You.💯💥

  • @HistoricalWeapons
    @HistoricalWeapons Год назад +5

    Very underrated man id love to help make this video into the mainstream if you want

    • @Acroballistics
      @Acroballistics  Год назад +2

      Thanks man and thanks for your previous support! Do whatever you feel like doing. It would be cool to help this video but for the next year I will have a lot of work so I doubt I will be able to make videos with similar effort as the last 3

    • @nathangrueber9834
      @nathangrueber9834 Год назад

      ​@@Acroballisticsheres one for ya.
      ruclips.net/user/shortsr9Q64HDwGNs?si=4AtIjGr5kFYyN5vP

  • @legate-lanius
    @legate-lanius Год назад +2

    ballistas and ancient artillery are so awesome 👏

  • @aldrinmilespartosa1578
    @aldrinmilespartosa1578 Год назад +1

    Very cool!

  • @matztertaler2777
    @matztertaler2777 Год назад +1

    Awesome! Nice Video! Thanks for the education! I subscribed!

  • @neutralfellow9736
    @neutralfellow9736 Год назад +2

    very interesting
    superb stuff

  • @rowgler1
    @rowgler1 9 месяцев назад +1

    I too am a student of Nick Watts.I agree with the approach of pre-winding the torsion bundles and having spares on hand. Wedges were used extensively in ancient times to quarry and cut stone. Many ancient soldiers spent time building with stone. Their stonework endures to this day and the use of feather and wedge sets to split stone and Lewis pins to lift stone were all a part of their masonry knowledge. I also found that I didn't need to use pins to hold the fine tuning of the washers, but steel on steel works that way. If they were dissimilar metals like bronze on steel it would be different. Think of locomotive wheels on steel rails providing traction vs. steel axles and bronze bushings acting as a simple bearing. I built an in-swinger and used modern nuts and bolts (helical wedges) to tension the bundles thinking a torque wrench would perhaps simplify balancing the two sides. Your model works extremely well, quick and smooth, very impressive. I really enjoy the explanation and exploration of the Springald 'exoskeleton' ballista. That is an idea that could taken further and would benefit by some strategic triangulation to minimize skewing. I hope you continue to work in this avenue, you have a knack for it. One thing I noticed, most people have found that in modern fibers, nylon holds a stretch, 'gets tired' whereas polyester is a better fiber for torsion applications. 🦂🛠

  • @Harry-bc2dn
    @Harry-bc2dn Месяц назад

    Excellent video!

  • @Doribi117
    @Doribi117 Год назад +2

    I love torsion powered things

  • @thejackinati2759
    @thejackinati2759 Год назад +2

    This is great stuff. Have you considered trying out the small stone-throwing variety?

    • @Acroballistics
      @Acroballistics  Год назад

      generally no. if it can shoot a stone far it can shoot an arrow further. if you mean an onager then thats a whole different set of problems

  • @LuciusQuinctiusCincinnatus111
    @LuciusQuinctiusCincinnatus111 Год назад +2

    cooool!!!))))))

  • @revolverocelot6334
    @revolverocelot6334 13 дней назад

    That's a quite informative video on all the different designs, you really put together a lot of sources together in short format, I appreciate that, it's very helpful for starting further research!
    Do you also have similarly extensive knowledge of the single-armed onagers as well?

    • @Acroballistics
      @Acroballistics  13 дней назад +1

      I've made a small one you see it in my short videos. The onager is a simpler design (tuning mainly arm length and sling length) it doesn't need spring tuning. But being simple doesn't mean it is easy to make and operate, it needs something to stop the momentum of the arm at every shot, and an arm that withstands the impact.

    • @revolverocelot6334
      @revolverocelot6334 13 дней назад

      @@Acroballistics Yeah, the hard impact of the arm sounds like a hurdle. Do you perhaps know if Romans produced any iconography showing it?

    • @Acroballistics
      @Acroballistics  13 дней назад +1

      @@revolverocelot6334 not any that I can recall

  • @LuciusQuinctiusCincinnatus111
    @LuciusQuinctiusCincinnatus111 Год назад +2

    👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @EJMunoz-ec9gz
    @EJMunoz-ec9gz Год назад +1

    😲

  • @Ismail-mq3xg
    @Ismail-mq3xg Год назад +2

    deadly primitive wepon 💀💀💀

  • @matthewfergusons4318
    @matthewfergusons4318 10 месяцев назад +1

    What is the 19th century militaries actually had to face the if they have to face the Roman empire or 49 African nations and civilizations that they were thought were inferior to them. This alliance is so interesting either that these people don't think they're supposed to slaves are inferior to the the white man in fact their weapons and tactics was used in simple slings and arrows were so effective and defeated us with the most modern rifles and even Canon that we were frustrated every time we try to was so great and the fact that you spy so effectively against us they could tell our positions where we are in fact we thought we had spies that could find find us or used we can trust turns out we can't we can never conquer this region of let's leave it alone

    • @volcajohann
      @volcajohann 7 дней назад

      Please learn to use punctuation. This is just violent to try to read