i absolutely adore them as you can probably guess by the fact that i spent so long trying to make danganronpa roleplays work as an actual way of allowing for interesting user-generated murder mysteries before giving up
instead iâm probably going to turn my hand to writing whodunnits myself
Polearms are primarily thrust weapons, so no youâre not really getting a mechanical advantage. Youâre getting a reach advantage.
of course itâs fol who knows things about medieval weaponry
Okay well im not sure of the appropriate physics terms at this point. I dont know if the word lever was correct. My original point, that you replied to, is my claim that a skinny warrior using a one handed axe/mace would deliver weaker blows than a skinny warrior with a polearm
if i finish the mystery iâll probably like. i donât know, send it in installments here or something before moving towards an actual form of publication
This is what you spent time reflecting?!
Men this days⌠grumble grumbleâŚ
i figure itâs what i owe the community even though iâm mostly inactive here nowadays. even now after all this time, though, what i liked about this place remains.
Yes; i dont see the relation to the original post
I donât think this is accurate, no. I think youâre overestimating the strength required to swing a mace with sufficient force, and misunderstanding the physics of how these weapons are used.
You were talking about lever. Both in the axe/mace strike and the polearms swings.
(the physic term) Lever is usually associated with scales, or scale-like movements.
In the case of axe/mace it was obvious, it what the lever was used for the striking motion.
But I couldnât imagine the first time, why would you say the lever helps with the polearmâs physics, so I made the parallel between the axe and the polearm.
(The horizontal movement of the polearm isnât in the favor of the wielder, since the polearm acts as a one-sided scale (with the wielder in the centre of gravity), so you canât measure lever from the middle of the polearm.)
When you chop wood you hold the axe at the end instead of the middle. The longer leverage helps. If you were the hold the axe at the middle, or near the head, it would be more difficult to chop the wood
you hold the axe near the head all the time wdym
itâs only when the axe is going down that you move your hand to the end of the handle :P
One hand is at the head. One hand is at the bottom. The hand at the head slides down to join the one at the bottom. You cant (shouldnt) hold it with both hands at the head
The hand that is gripping the axe at the bottom doesnât go lower you cant just let go of the axe
Yes, but when you chopping wood, you strike the woods down, and not swinging at them.
Itâs the difference of a vertical lever (striking/woodchooping), and horizontal lever (sweeping/swinging).
Try chopping wood next time with horizontal movement instead of vertical, and you would see the difference.
(Also I bet you wouldnât be able to choop wood with polearm either⌠Itâs no wonder chooping axes are as long as they are.)
Brother if youâre swinging around a polearm youâre whipping around a thing that is heavier than a one-handed war hammer, mace, or battle axe. Without gravity, youâre the one putting the velocity into it. Youâre using two hands which means that when youâre not swinging it, it needs to be up and pointed at your opponent with the weight further away from your body which means that the lever is working against you. A one-handed weapon is held closer to the body, and at a less extreme angle.
yes im aware
odds are extremely high i have felled more trees than you lel
unless you happen to have worked for money on cutting trees or chopping wood, i suppose