Marble shooting crossbow
A few months after having built my home made crossbow I had an idea for building one that would shoot marbles. This was in the mid 80s, when I was still a teenager living out in the country. My dad still had some narrower strips of spring steel that I hadn't used up with my other crossbow. These wouldn't be strong enough to throw an arrow really hard, but for much lighter projectiles they'd be just right.
At the time that I built it (back in 1986), my options for measuring the projectile speed were very limited - basically, no media capable computers and digital cameras existed, and I didn't even have an oscilloscope. But I measured the speed of the projectile by shooting a marble up into a ball of plasticine. The marble became stuck in the plasticine, and I measured how high the plasticine ball was thrown up. From that, I was able to calculate its speed, and thus its momentum, and from the weight of the plasticine and the marble, I was able to calculate how fast the marble must have hit the ball to give it that momentum. The muzzle velocity with marbles is 67 meters per second, which it turned out, worked out to 150 mph even (I don't use MPH normally, but I remembered that figure because it worked out so evenly). That's way out of slingshot territory, but still only about half as fast as the marble shooting airgun I built 17 years later.
The solution I tried was to have a track both above and below the marble. This kept the marble in place and also prevented the string from jumping over the marble. I wasn't at all sure whether this would work when I started, but it was worth a try. Surprisingly, it actually worked. I might have used slightly better wood if I had known that it would work when I started!
You can see the string getting frayed, as usual. I had originally used two tightly wound strands of baler twine, but didn't have any of that available last time I replaced the string. So I braided together three groups of strands from those super strong white straps that are often tied around shipping crates. The braiding really helped in that it keeps the frayed parts from separating from the main bundle. That in turn slows down further fraying.
I also added a simple target sight to the crossbow. A nail, bent to the shape of a metal
arch is at the front and a notch is at the back. Aiming is done by lining up the bottom of the
notch with the inside of the metal arc at the front.
It's not nearly as accurate as the sight on a rifle, but then again neither is the crossbow, so the sight is more than adequate.
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