Posts: 6 Location: Trieste, Italy
Fri 14 Mar, 2008 1:25 am
So I see that a lot of people are confused about "energy" when it comes to armour and weapon penetration. There are only two important factors: A, pressure of the weapon at point of contact with armour, and B, inertia of the target. Let me illustrate this. Imagine swinging a baseball bat of a given mass at a given velocity at someones chest. Then imagine swinging a sharp axe of exactly the same mass at exactly the same velocity; both would strike the chest with exactly the same energy, but which would you prefer to be hit by? Similarly, shooting with a bow at
chain mail hung on a stick is not a good test since the mail will act as a "stopnet". Most archers out there will be familiar with the type of stopnets used at modern archery tournaments, hung loosely behind the straw targets they stop arrows from both recurves and compound bows alike since the net has low inertia. Would anyone out there care to wear the same netting across their chest and allow a compound archer to shoot at them?
As all of you out there know,
chainmail was used across all of Europe the Middle East and Asia as protection for several centuries. At the time of the Norman conquest of England it was used by Normans and Saxons alike, and developed as a means of protection against edged weapons; axes, swords and
seaxes. it remained in common use all through the early medieval period even when plate armour began to develop, where chainmail was used as a backing for armour plate and a means of protecting weak areas where early armour articulated. It wasn't until armour technology had reached its zenith, during the Rennaisance, when it was totally encasing and joints were perfectly articulated that chainmail disappeared. (For reference see Henry VIII's
Greenwich armour). What drove the development of plate armour was the increasing use of the longbow on the battlefield and it is no coincidence that the most common warhead found during the early medieval period is the needle bodkin, although, as a matter of fact broadheads are quite capable of perforating chainmail at close range. Needle bodkins easily open up the rings of chainmail and allow an arrow to penetrate , this is why one needs to be careful when discussing the effectiveness of weapons in terms of "energy', you have to take the geometry of the weapon into consideration. It's also worth remembering that European chainmail of this period wasn't made of steel but "charcoal iron" that had a very low carbon content; the first steel that Europeans encountered was in the Middle East, during the crusades, made from high carbon-containing ores imported from Asia. If all this seems a bit theoretical I recommend reading the series of articles written by longbow archer Mark Stretton on forged arrow heads and his tests using them, in the british archery magazine "The Glade", these articles include proper practical tests of various warhead types against various armours to give a true idea about what was possible.