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I amay have asked, but... Atlatls???


gewing

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Anyone have any good writeups for them?

 

I was thinking +5 str for purpose of range and damage, as a quick and dirty approximation. I'm not sure they weren't more accurate too, though.

 

I am also looking for a d-20 writeup (Please don't hurt me!!!) and was thinking x1.5 on range increment, +1 damage. something like that.

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Re: I amay have asked, but... Atlatls???

 

Spear throwers confer extra distance and hitting power, but they require specialized lightweight projectiles designed specifically for that purpose. They generally cannot be used with "ordinary" thrusting spears. The spears thrown by an atlatl would be be more like javelins or large arrows. They are even fletched. (I've used one, but since I'm a terrible shot when throwing things I can't address the accuracy issue.)

 

I would treat an atlatl as a medium crossbow for most practical purposes, with a higher rate of fire (but still slower than a regular bow and arrows.. The main difference is that atlatl users cannot realistically carry as many projectiles. I would think 4 - 6 spears would be the maximum.

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Re: I amay have asked, but... Atlatls???

 

In my own very limited experiance they should hit as hard as a bow, but with a much more limited range..I remember thinking I would be dangerous with practice at 50' or less, and a good bow or x-bow would replace feet with Yards for the same statement.....

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Re: I amay have asked, but... Atlatls???

 

In my own very limited experiance they should hit as hard as a bow, but with a much more limited range..I remember thinking I would be dangerous with practice at 50' or less, and a good bow or x-bow would replace feet with Yards for the same statement.....

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Re: I amay have asked, but... Atlatls???

 

IIRC Napolean had some experiments done, someone killed an ox at 100 yards with one.

 

The Australian ones appear to use a fairly normal weight/size javelin.

 

Some cultures have used permanently mounted thongs or strings to get a similar effect.

 

The Romans iirc used a loop of string twisted around the javelin in a half hitch, it not only extended range of a full weight shaft, but the string stayed in the soldiers hand so the opponent could not use it to throw it back. The book I remember reading indicated this meant their range with a heavy javelin was greater than the enemies. Kind of useful.

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  • 5 years later...

Re: I amay have asked, but... Atlatls???

 

I did something along the same lines with this cavalry write up: Landrothi Light Cavalry

 

On a side note, in the world of San'Dora Landrothi are from the Aranashi race, and are diminutive; about 4.5 feet tall or so on average, so an atlatl like device helps them out a bit.

 

Race Comparison

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Re: I amay have asked, but... Atlatls???

 

The Romans iirc used a loop of string twisted around the javelin in a half hitch' date=' it not only extended range of a full weight shaft, but the string stayed in the soldiers hand so the opponent could not use it to throw it back. The book I remember reading indicated this meant their range with a heavy javelin was greater than the enemies. Kind of useful.[/quote']

 

If you are referring to the Roman pilum, holding on to the string is not the reason the enemy couldn't throw them back. The pilum was deliberately top-heavy, so only troops that trained with it could throw it accurately. It had a head about 2 feet long, with a soft iron bar connecting the point to the socket, and a soft wood pin held it on the shaft. On impact the head would often bend, and the pin would break if you tried to pull it out by the shaft. So it was a one-way weapon. After a battle, they could be gathered, hammered straight and re-assembled, then re-issued to the troops.

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