Thanks, Orcbow. I started these projects with zero metal working skills. Like bow making, I wanted to learn, so I had to decide to learn the necessary metal skillls. They are pretty rudimentry, really. Casting is not impossibly hard to learn, and I made myself a small propane fired melting oven, basically a metal cylinder on end lined with refractory and using a commercial bbq tank with a high-volume regulator and hose so I can get the needed psi to get it to 1800 degrees. Hand made rivets are not that easy, but not too hard either, mostly using a heavy ball peen hammer carefully to flatten the shank ends, then peening the edges around and down onto the sheet metal. As for hand forged nails, my blacksmith friend is helping, though I want to learn to smith one day. I just picked up an antique anvil today, cheap! Found it in a dingy little antique store near me. More than large enough (I can barely lift it), and it is probaly American, German, or English made, so good quality.
Posted are two shots of my first ever bluing. This is to simulate the way actual sheet iron would have looked as done by the Romans. I used Vans bluing, easy and fun to use. The part you see is an inner spring frame stanchion. I am plating all the frame parts, and it will weight quite a bit more when it is done. One day, I want to builld one of these machiens using reproduction ancient Roman and Greek hand tools only, only using the same processes that would have existed 2000 year ago, such as chiseling out the various holes, no power drills, etc.
Dave, I appreciate the interest! The Greek belly bows, called gastrophetes, really are the first true catapults. If you look at that shot of me at the Vermont event, you can see the scorpio-minor (lesser or small scorpion) on the ground, the one I had been posting about a while back. It cocks by using your weight on the back horizontal brace, leaning forward to the slider is against the ground or a handy wall, say, and your weigh spans the machine. I am making it using the Greek style linear ratchets, you can see the SketchUp drawing I did a while back during the design phase. The advantage is that you can fire an arrow with a hand held machine that is much stronger than the strongest self or composite bows, and the trajectory is very flat, and so fast you literally can not see the bolt coming at you, unlike a bow. These things are supposed to be so powerful, they can defeat any known armor of the day, and easily punch through chain mail with heavy arrow tips, very similar to the medival bodkins. As well, it is much easier to train a man to use this than to use a war weight bow, as we all know. It took a life time to get proficient with a heavy war bow.
The gastrophetes used, we think, a composite bow, so it is similar looking to a cross bow, but much heavier, much earlier than even the first wimpy little cross bows.
As for sinew, that is the holy grail for modern catapult builders! You need so much sinew, no one has tried, until now. Even Dr. Schramm, one of the great early pioneers of bow reconstructing failed in this area. I dont yet know how much sinew would be needed for 150 feet of rope, what I will need for the 2" machine, let alone the amount for a large balista, which has huge springs. You are right, almost every single interpreted catapult has used dacron rope. It is not the best solution, but used frequently. Horse hair rope is a good second string material, though, and what I am using until I can acquire the amount of sinew I need for future projects.
How Vetruvius described creating the rope springs is that the engineer build a special small winding mechanism, and then pluck the sinew rope at regular intervals, to determine that he has equal tension throughout the processes. All anyone knows now is that real sinew rope would be incredibly effective, and we can learn too the disadvantiges of using that materil in the field, such as during damp weather, things like that.
I doubt they used ratchets with the small machines. My thoughts are that about 1.5" and up for spring diameter, you need a winch system of some sort to span the machine. The gastropetes and my little machine will use body weight, and it simplfies construction considerably.
Dane
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