- #1
Robert Williams
- 12
- 0
In Traditional Archery, there is a widely held belief that momentum is the best indicator of an arrow's capacity for penetration. The most important support for this theory comes from this document: The Ashby Report<---Link to document (PDF)
This document has never been reviewed or proofed by anyone with a background in physics and is, in my opinion, so full of fundamental flaws and misapplied formulas as to render it completely useless and a second, third or 4th opinion from knowledgeable members of the Physics community would be very helpful (and very important, in my opinion).
What makes this a particularly troublesome theory is that it has convinced a huge number of archers to hunt with arrows that have high weight and low velocity out of fear that anything lighter and faster wouldn't provide adequate penetration. And this belief is rampant, causing a lot of bad shots due to inability to precisely place the looping trajectories on target.
Because the momentum formula gives equal importance to velocity and mass, archers feel their bow can generate more "penetration power" by increasing their arrow weight, thereby increasing the value of the momentum. They can't increase the kinetic energy, of course, because the bow will only generate X-amount of that.
Any help explaining whether kinetic energy or momentum is the best descriptor of the arrow "force" that generates penetration, and why it is the best descriptor, would be immensely helpful.
This topic has generated many thousands of pages of arguments and hundreds of very bad analogies like throwing ping pong balls and golf balls. Some real science and scientific explanations and a critical analysis of the Ashby report would do a tremendous amount of good and I think you in advance for any and all help in this matter.
p.s. Here are just a couple of the discussions to which I'm referring:
http://leatherwall.bowsite.com/tf/lw/thread2.cfm?forum=23&threadid=163035&category=
http://leatherwall.bowsite.com/tf/lw/thread2.cfm?forum=23&threadid=164228&messages=47&CATEGORY=5
This document has never been reviewed or proofed by anyone with a background in physics and is, in my opinion, so full of fundamental flaws and misapplied formulas as to render it completely useless and a second, third or 4th opinion from knowledgeable members of the Physics community would be very helpful (and very important, in my opinion).
What makes this a particularly troublesome theory is that it has convinced a huge number of archers to hunt with arrows that have high weight and low velocity out of fear that anything lighter and faster wouldn't provide adequate penetration. And this belief is rampant, causing a lot of bad shots due to inability to precisely place the looping trajectories on target.
Because the momentum formula gives equal importance to velocity and mass, archers feel their bow can generate more "penetration power" by increasing their arrow weight, thereby increasing the value of the momentum. They can't increase the kinetic energy, of course, because the bow will only generate X-amount of that.
Any help explaining whether kinetic energy or momentum is the best descriptor of the arrow "force" that generates penetration, and why it is the best descriptor, would be immensely helpful.
This topic has generated many thousands of pages of arguments and hundreds of very bad analogies like throwing ping pong balls and golf balls. Some real science and scientific explanations and a critical analysis of the Ashby report would do a tremendous amount of good and I think you in advance for any and all help in this matter.
p.s. Here are just a couple of the discussions to which I'm referring:
http://leatherwall.bowsite.com/tf/lw/thread2.cfm?forum=23&threadid=163035&category=
http://leatherwall.bowsite.com/tf/lw/thread2.cfm?forum=23&threadid=164228&messages=47&CATEGORY=5