Yes, sorry. You are correct. 50% is not twice as strong, it is 1.5 times as strong. Hopefully you can agree that this isn't a trivial amount though and that I wasn't just pulling numbers out of my victorian-age ass.Haerthan said:Thanks for the sources, really interesting. But your math is a bit wrong since 50% is not double. 100% is double, so your math is a bit wrong.Lightknight said:Really long snip
Thank you for the correction.
Long Swords of that period averaged between 35 inches and 43 inches. So it's the size above the one you're thinking about.Second I am thinking of the long sword that is depicted as a knight's blade, around 30-34 inches, used with a shield. So from say 1000 AD to 1500 AD. No idea why I mentioned the Zweihander, shouldn't have done that. So at most between 1 to 2 kg. Those were made as thrusting and stabbing as well. Only the Zweihander were used for slashing.
Regarding the claim that they weren't used for slashing, as I showed in the picture, long swords were absolutely used for hacking and slashing. How you use them just depended on whether or not the person you were fighting was wearing armor. No armor? Cleave away. Fully armored? Pointy end applies the most pressure in the least area giving the greatest chance of puncturing. Look at the styles the sword master was portraying. Down and behind for the guy on the left, above the head for the guy on the right. These are clearly cleaving stances. If the individual was wearing armor and was fighting against someone wearing armor then you'd see stabbing and clubbing like I showed in the second image that I had to spoiler due to the size. Those images are from one of the most famous swordsmen of all time. Had I found images of his work contradicting what I am saying I would have quickly recanted because he's a sword master living in the time period this was actually happening. Even rapiers were occasionally used for slashing though much rarer due to the fragility of the tip.
Right, skill will win against incompetence even over strength. For example, my first week in wrestling I was bested by a guy half my size.Lastly I do understand the difference it does, but with proper application of thinking (former Tai Chi and Sword form practitioner-though I still keep in touch) weight has less issue. I saw grown men being thrown around by a waif of a woman. I did it myself. But thanks for the sources, it was insightful.
However, with minimal training weight quickly becomes a huge factor. It's why you have to EXTRA good at what you do in things like boxing to fight in a higher weight class, why it's so rare, you know? It's not that the most skilled person can't be a light weight. It's just that weight matters in anything where force is applied.
So, this guy half my weight that beat me the first week? Within half a year I beat him and two smaller guys at the same time as a demonstration that our coach (a national championship wrestler in whatever the weight class close to 110 was) wanted to show us. A point he wanted to make. I wasn't the most skilled wrestler but I was at that point skilled enough to make my skill and weight absolutely conquer them.
Anyone with skill can beat a n00b. But just a little bit of skill in the hands of someone with strength can go a lot further than the same amount of skill in the hands of someone with less strength.
Ah hah! That's great! Hahaha. She even did that while only within 10-15 lbs of Arnold. She should be very proud of that weight.Ariseishirou said:I agree with your point overall, and not to be pedantic, but... that's actually not true. Arnold's personal record for bench press is 440lbs. The current women's powerlifting record for bench press is also 440lbs. The women's world record for squats is 100lbs more than he could ever manage. While you couldn't be as strong as the strongest man, if you're a woman, you technically _can_ be as strong as Arnold - in his prime, no less!Lightknight said:I'm sorry if you're a female and someone told you that you could grow up to be just as strong as Arnold some day. That was a lie you were told.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Schwarzenegger#Powerlifting.2Fweightlifting
http://www.powerliftingwatch.com/records/raw/women-world
However, I would recommend comparing April Mathis with Arnold Schwarzenegger (at the time he was lifting that amount) and come to your own conclusions:
https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-oxojpxADRdo/VDM5T5HDgtI/AAAAAAAAJvU/Ue4IDemUPGw/s640/April-Mathis-at-Port-St-Lucie.jpg
http://liberallifestyles.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/arn-49-Young-Arnold-Schwarzenegger-12.jpg
Do you see how much harder women have to treat their bodies to get to that level than men do? Do I think April (in her early twenties) hit the steroids? Sure, and hard. Really hard. She's still that strong though, regardless. I'd actually like to learn more about her but can't find so much as a wiki. Strange.
It's important to understand that the next closest record to hers I think are like 403. This is not at all a normal thing for a woman to do. This is like a one person thing so far.
The men's current record is well over 1,000 lbs. So perhaps Arnold would have been that strong had he grown up today. But from what he's said, he used steroids to maintain his muscles, not to get them. And he freely admits to using them so I'm not sure he'd lie about the why.