9" Nails, Pump Action
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2. cameramaster commented 10 years ago
It makes you glad they didn't have elastic in ancient Japan !


5. loadrunner commented 10 years ago
And if you make ceramic darts, you can even go to security everywhere without ringing any alarm bells, which checks for metal objects. :o


6. sidewinder commented 10 years ago
Big child...


7. challenger451 commented 10 years ago
I love this guy! I'll bet he was hell on the neighbors pets when he was a kid. He never loses the child like wonder of toys and playing. He is a big kid and I have a big kid in me also.
Of course most of these "weapons" are made for killing things.
Of course most of these "weapons" are made for killing things.


9. Pizzathehutt26 commented 10 years ago
Just want him to post his home invasion video. 'So this guy jumped into my yard and I heard my bear trap get triggered and a scream, this gave me time to run to my shed but then I had the problem of which weapon to grab first, so many choices' 



10. Dennis53 commented 1 year ago
Regarding his power analysis, where he compares his shooting force with driving the nails in with a 5 lb. persuader hammer (a heavy hammer, to be sure) a much more effective way to think about this would be to clamp the bow directly to the board target and then have the cocking motion of pulling back the bow sink a nail into the board. It's the cocking effort that is ALL the force available for driving in that nail. The frictional forces of the nail flying thru the air and from sliding past the bow, these forces are negligible. So pushing in the nail by a 3' long lever, that's the power of the weapon. Shooting the bow simply uses that energy quickly, but it's the same amount of 'work'.
+17 1. mashkalji commented 10 years ago