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A really nice BBQ Gun

 A 44 Russian Scofield DA revolver

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Springfield Trapdoor. French Gras. Italian Vetterli

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M16 – the Iconic Weapon of the Vietnam War

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Dear Grumpy Advice on Teaching in Today's Classroom

Worst Times To Be A Roman

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Spanish Miquelet Flintlock

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Dear Grumpy Advice on Teaching in Today's Classroom War

Why Crossbows and Longbows Were The Worst War Bows by Carl Hamilton

For those of you who didn’t know, I shoot a longbow, I have nothing against longbows, I enjoy shooting them tremendously. However, one has to acknowledge that of all the bow designs this is the most primitive one, and yes that does matter. Many things factor into what is actually a good bow, let’s talk about that.

The Power of the Bow

There is an idea which might come from video games, movies or just people reading the draw weight, that a bigger bow is proportionally stronger. But you have to ask yourself what makes a projectile stronger. Well, essentially it’s the energy delivered on target that ultimately determines the power of a bow. What is energy? Hopefully you remember from school that kinetic energy is a function of mass and velocity, with velocity being the more important factor.

As such, what you must understand is that draw-weight =/= energy. It does not matter how big the draw weight is, if the conversation from stored spring energy to kinetic energy is inefficient. What is essential, is how fast the string moves the arrow, and for how long it does this. The higher draw weight, allows a string to move a heavier arrow at a faster or similar speed. Various materials can influence how good a similar design performs, naturally there are well made bows, and less well made bows. But the most important thing is the design of the bow. Bows were not made equally, and generally, longbows are the least efficient design, while Asian composite recurve bows are the most efficient historical designs. But nothing even compares to how efficient modern compound pulley bows are.

Below you will see a table I have created, which took, way, WAY too long to gather the data for. Consider the the column j per pound, which the table is sorted after. That is joules (energy) per pound of draw weight, and it is the best indication of energy transfer efficiency I could come up with. This kind of information is surprisingly difficult to come by with bows currently made, and not just something which is labled on the box usually, unless it’s a legal hunting bow. Some data was readily available, others I had to test or watch tests done by archers including, Armin Hirmer, Joe Gibbs, Tod Cutler and Skallagrim on YouTube who did speed tests. The * represents estimated draw length.

It should be immediately obvious, that the Chinese Manchu bow style, whether it is made of bamboo or fiberglass, is a highly efficient bow design. But it absolutely pales in comparison to the PSE Dominator compound bow. The Mary Rose longbows, are mastercrafted bows by Joe Gibbs, and you can see that even so, they are not that energy efficient, even compared to cheap mass produced bows of a Korean recurve style.

Please note that the crossbows are extremely inefficient, even with 960 pounds, the windless crossbow has less energy than even the smaller mary rose longbow. This has everything to do with draw length. European crossbow were simply extremely inefficient, and compensated for that with a huge weight.

Terminal and flight ballistics.

Energy at release is also not quite the same as energy on impact. A lot like anti tank weapons, arrows penetrate better, when they are longer. The famous length to diameter ratio is as important for an arrow as it is for an APFSDS. As you can imagine, crossbow bolts therefore are not great armour perpetrators. However, if they hit a target that isn’t covered by armour, a crossbow bolt will most likely transfer more energy quickly, potentially causing worse wounds. Additionally, crossbow bolts are more likely to get influenced by the wind and has a higher wind resistance, more quickly losing energy than arrows, and as such as less range in general.

Asian bows like the Manchu style and Mongolian bows fired very long arrows, which were also quite heavy. Asian arrows are often tanged meaning the metal tip extends into the shaft. The Manchu bows generally have a longer draw length, heavier arrows and the tang makes the shaft more rigid.

Rigidity again is important for energy transfer. The tanged arrows help in significantly increasing the energy transfer by reducing the energy wasted on arrow flexing on impact, which is quite pronounced on western arrows. Modern carbon arrows are much more rigid than any historical war arrows ever were. A compound bow doesn’t just impart more energy on the arrow, the modern arrows also transfer it better to the target due to more sophisticated construction. They can also be thinner for the same or heavier weight, allowing less air resistance again increasing energy retention.

Western vs Chinese crossbows

Chinese crossbows are profoundly different in construction from the western medieval type crossbows. From the beginning the Chinese put the trigger of the Asian crossbows on the back of the handle, rather than near the front. This meant that nearly the entire length of the Chinese crossbows is the draw length, rather than just a few inches as on the western ones. This means that Chinese crossbows are essentially just regular bows with crossbow trigger mechanisms.

Historically this has upsides and down sides. Chinese crossbows were made so that weaker people with less skill could fire bigger bows, Song dynasty crossbows were typically 100 pounds draw weight, which is quite powerful, but it is not on the level of Mary Rose or Mongolian archers at the time. Due to the self-imposed limitations of crossbow draw length in Europe, European crossbows were made with increasingly sophisticated draw assistance. In China crossbows were typically hand pulled or feet pulled, the latter required that you lay down. Obviously this is less than practical in battlefield conditions, but probably fine in a siege.

It is possible to imagine, that with a combination of technology, 900 pound steel spanned crossbow, but with a 25 inch draw length and trigger from a Chinese crossbow could be possible, which would indeed have been like a hand ballista, but no such thing was ever made.

Conclusions

Look the primary advantage of the longbow particularly in English use, was that it was cheap and available. It did the job, but it was not a spectacular weapon, and in reality it most often did not win battles. Crecy and Agincourt were the exceptions not the rules, they were victories which astounded the world, and still does today, because knights lost to these peasant weapons. If that was the case all the time, knights wouldn’t never have fought that way in general, and England would have won the 100 year war, which they did not. Longbows have been used everywhere, since basically the stone age, and they are fine weapons, but a true master archer does more than fire a heavy bow.

Some countries in history fielded archers of such epic quality, that they dominated the battlefield. No one is more famous of this than the Mongolian Empire. The Asian composite bows, were not weaker than English longbows in draw weight, but they were more energy efficient. I think it is safe to say that the Mongolian warbows of the 12th century, were stronger than the strongest warbows at Agincourt.

You might also ask why even use crossbows if they are so inefficient? Well, while European crossbows were horribly energy-inefficient compared to bows, they had several other advantages. You could use them in narrow spaces, which made them ideal for firing out of slits in castle sieges, inside houses, or heavily wooded areas in forest. You could fire them rapidly once readied, and you could reload them behind cover. They were excellent skirmishing weapons, but on an open field vs a large formation of archers, they did poorly, as shown by multiple actual European battles where this was tried. But people did use them for a reason, just not to challenge war bows on an open field.

Chinese crossbows, were not nearly has handy, mobile or versatile to use. On the other hand they allowed vast groups of peasants with minimal training, to fire reasonably powerful bows, though probably not the most powerful ones.

Either way, a master archer whether Manchu, Mongolian, Arabic or otherwise, also had the advantage of speed, being able to fire extraordinary many arrows quickly. Crossbows were horribly slow whether Chinese or Western. The master archer chose the composite bows, because they were efficient, fast, had a long range and was far more compact than a longbow. The bow was expensive and so was the archer, but if you wanted the best of the best, this is what you got, they have nothing but advantages over the alternatives and there is a reason why a small group of Mongolian master archers were able to dominate a third of the world in 2 generations, and it was not just that they had horses.

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A Victory!

VA Ends Automatic NICS Reporting for Veterans | 200,000 Affected

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Boeing Bails on Anti-Gun Virginia — And Gun Owners Should Be Paying Attention by Scott Witner

Virginia Gun Bills Surge as Boeing Exits

Elections have consequences. Sometimes those consequences show up fast — like when one of the nation’s largest defense contractors decides it’s seen enough and heads for the exits barely a month after the new governor takes office.

That’s exactly what happened in Virginia this week. Boeing announced it’s yanking its Defense, Space & Security headquarters out of Arlington and heading back to St. Louis — the same division it moved to Virginia in 2022 when business-friendly Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin was making the Commonwealth an attractive place to build things that go boom in defense of this country. Youngkin’s gone now. Abigail Spanberger is in charge. Boeing didn’t need to wait for a second term to read the room.

And here’s the part that should have every Virginia gun owner sitting up straight: the same agenda that sent Boeing packing is the same one coming for your AR, your standard-capacity magazines, and anything else Democrats have decided you don’t need.

Spanberger wasn’t in office five minutes before Virginia Democrats came out swinging with roughly 40 gun-related bills this session. The crown jewel is House Bill 217 — a flat-out ban on so-called “assault firearms,” targeting semiautomatic centerfire rifles equipped with magazines over 20 rounds, folding stocks, or the ability to accept a suppressor. Violators face Class 1 misdemeanor charges. The legislature also advanced a 10-round magazine cap that would instantly criminalize thousands of law-abiding Virginians who currently own perfectly legal standard-capacity mags. They’re also pushing a $500 state tax on suppressors — right after the federal $200 NFA tax was zeroed out. Because nothing says “we respect your rights” like a punitive tax on a hearing protection device.

Let’s be clear about where Spanberger comes from on this. She’s a former volunteer for Bloomberg’s Moms Demand Action. Everytown for Gun Safety dropped $1 million in paid media to put her in the governor’s mansion and personally contacted a quarter-million Virginia voters to make it happen. This isn’t a politician who stumbled into gun control. This is a true believer with a compliant legislature and a pen that’s itching to sign everything Youngkin kept in the trash.

House Minority Leader Terry Kilgore called HB 217 exactly what it is — a direct defiance of Bruen and a blatant attempt to criminalize the most commonly owned rifles in America. He’s right, and the lawsuits will fly. But that’s the point. These people don’t care if their laws get struck down eventually. They want them on the books now, and they want Virginians living under the threat of prosecution in the meantime.

Meanwhile, Boeing is heading to Missouri — a constitutional carry state — where Secretary of War Pete Hegseth showed up at the St. Louis plant to congratulate the workers and call them “patriots that are key elements to ensuring peace through strength.” Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe called it a “win for the heartland.” Hard to argue.

The connection here isn’t subtle. The political environment that makes Boeing decide Virginia is no longer worth the risk is the same environment that looks at a law-abiding gun owner and sees a criminal-in-waiting. Both are targets of the same ideological project. Both are being told that their presence — whether as a defense manufacturer or as an armed citizen — is no longer welcome in the new Virginia.

Youngkin kept the wolves at bay. Spanberger opened the gate. Virginia gun owners knew this was coming. Now it’s here.

Stand your ground, Virginians. The Virginia Citizens Defense League, Gun Owners of America, and the NRA-ILA all have active campaigns running right now. Use them.

Sources:

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The Green Machine Well I thought it was funny!

Outgoing Company Commander: ‘I Hate You All’ by Duffel Blog Staff

The following is a transcript of outgoing company commander Capt. Vince Miller’s change of command speech:

Good morning everyone. I’d normally begin with our unit motto, but after two and a half years of starting every meeting and discussion with it, I just don’t think I can stomach it anymore. So I’ll say good morning like a normal human being.

I should probably thank my battalion commander for the opportunity to command this company over the last few years, in both combat and garrison, but I think I’d rather go out into the parking lot and key his car for saddling me with the greatest collection of idiots, malingerers, and criminals that have ever walked the face of this earth.

You’ll notice my wife and daughters aren’t here sitting in the audience today. That’s because Sheila left me six months ago when I had to skip our 10th anniversary trip to Jamaica so I could come in on a Sunday for unit PT, since one of you dipshits decided to go out and get his third DUI.

I wasn’t allowed to go to marriage counseling last year when our relationship was on the rocks because the commander had said that soldiers were the priority. So instead I gave my slot to Private Steadman and his former prostitute wife who he met on R&R in Brazil the month prior. Once they got back, she took all his money and Steadman killed himself. So thanks for that.

Do any of you morons have any clue how much paperwork it causes when you blow your sad little heads off? At least have the courtesy to go AWOL first. But for fuck’s sake don’t come back for at least 30 days so I can drop you off my books and let someone else deal with the meatsack of failure that is your existence.

This would now be the part of the speech where I talk about our glorious combat achievements. Too bad, there’s nothing glorious about walking around Afghanistan for 12 months finding IEDs with your feet. Now I’m deaf in one ear, have almost a pound of shrapnel in my ass, and occasionally I wake up screaming for no fucking reason. But you know what? That doesn’t make me a goddamned hero. That was the worst part about coming back. Not my empty home, empty bed, or shattered dreams. No, it was listening to you fuckwads thump your chests and talk about how badass you all were. Did any one of you actually get a confirmed kill over there? One?

I didn’t think so.

So in closing, let me say this. Thank you for the countless weekends I lost with my daughters because I had to deal with your trivial bullshit. Thank you for the two suicide investigations that forced me to cancel training events I’d planned for almost a year. And most importantly, thank you for the dishonesty, poor accountability, and outright theft of almost two million dollars in equipment, which is why I won’t be receiving another paycheck until February.

May God smite you all with the power of a thousand suns, and your souls be condemned to Hell for eternity.

And to the incoming commander. Good luck and God bless you for making such terrible life choices.

There’s a bottle of scotch in the third drawer of my desk. You’re going to need it.

I hate you all.

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All About Guns Some Red Hot Gospel there!

Makes sense to me Mr. President!