View Issue Details
ID | Project | Category | View Status | Date Submitted | Last Update |
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0000833 | Dwarf Fortress | Projectiles | public | 2010-04-08 15:40 | 2012-02-22 00:36 |
Reporter | Milaha | Assigned To | |||
Priority | normal | Severity | minor | Reproducibility | always |
Status | resolved | Resolution | no change required | ||
OS | Windows 7 | ||||
Product Version | 0.31.01 | ||||
Summary | 0000833: Adamantine bolts do less damage, bolts ineffective in general | ||||
Description | Adamantine Bolts will at most dent creatures and bruise skin. Other forms of bolts fired from the same weapon cause significantly more damage (generally tearing muscle and bruising layer underneath). A guess off the top of my head would be that the problem lies in the weight of the bolt, since other Adamantine weapons are highly effective. | ||||
Steps To Reproduce | Easily tested with bowdwarf equipped with Adamantine bolts in arena mode. | ||||
Tags | No tags attached. | ||||
parent of | 0001362 | resolved | crossbows don't do enough damage to camels | |
has duplicate | 0002041 | resolved | Hunters level incredibly fast, mainly because animals die too slow | |
has duplicate | 0002774 | resolved | Crossbows ineffective against trained armor users (goblins) | |
related to | 0000033 | resolved | Toady One | Bronze colossus, skeletal creatures, fleshballs, and others are impossible to kill |
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Makes sense in fact. I want to make adamantine-pointed lead bolts! |
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Yeah, this is probably not a bug, since adamantine has a density of 0.2g/cm^2, which is less than most cork, which is the only thing I could find that seems remotely comparable. Some woods are less dense, but most are much more dense, and it's not like you should be making arrows and bolts out of balsa anyway. I can see adamantine bolts being good once we get multiple-component items in. Say, a steel shaft with an adamantine head. |
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Well, I would consider it a bug, due to the fact that IRL this actually has a much lesser effect than you would expect afaik, a lower weight simply causes a higher velocity conveyed by the firing weapon, and maintains a similar kinetic energy. Sure it plays some role (especially at extreme values) but the problem here is more likely that the weapon fires the projectile at a set velocity, rather than realistically simulating the velocity based on the weapon material, construction, and projectile weight. A "quick fix" would be to force all projectiles to be a set weight, to account for the set velocity, as obviously a complete overhaul of the projectile weapon system is not something that we can expect any time soon (if ever). To put it in math terms E = M * A E is provided by drawing the weapon, and does not change based on the projectile loaded in, thus as Mass goes down, Acceleration goes up. This process is reversed on impact, and energy conveyed remains about the same. EDIT: Checking RAWs, it does appear this equation is properly modeled, however the max velocity value may be (way) too low. (comments say it is set based on how fast the string could possibly go, which is crazy fast) EDIT2: Further testing has shown that the max velocity was the limiting factor with all ammo (by a LOT) thus we were looking at an accurate model, but with the E value cranked way too high, and the max velocity the string could go way too slow. Effectively making the mass of the projectile the largest factor in damage imparted. Altering only the max velocity, and leaving force the same bronze bolts are demolishing dragons. Simply tweaking these values to be a more accurate numbers should fix the issue. |
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I seem to recall some people saying that bolts in general seem to act more like a blunt object than a piercing one. Indeed, using your crossbow as a blunt object gives you 2x the penetration (4000 vs. 2000) than a bolt. That's...kinda weird. |
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My take on adamantine projectiles: The force of resistance (from air and penetration) would be more due to higher velocity (less penetration, more impact). The deceleration from that resistance force would be higher for a much less massive object (kinetic energy reduces faster over distance). However, higher velocity would also mean a less arching trajectory (more accuracy, less reaction time for defense). Also, skilled users can take advantage of the more direct aiming and can try to hit weaknesses (high critical rates for high skilled users) Summary: Optimal range is reduced. Accuracy is increased. Less response time for defense. Highly-skilled users have an even better chance for critical hits. Armor can't be pierced, but can still bruise. Relies on critical hits for extreme damage. |
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SirPenguin: Looking at various values, it looks to me like higher penetration may be related to how far in the weapon goes rather than how easily it penetrates. Spears have a very high number (10k) and Daggers very low (1k). The earlier value (contact area) seems to be what would determine the ease of penetration. as both the dagger and spear have similar values in this regard. Meanwhile the blunt weapons, or the cutting attack of a sword/axe have very high contact areas and high penetration values, to reflect a very deep cut that could possibly go clean through the body slicing the enemy in half, or in the case of blunt weapons (with even more force) breaking off a limb. Greyhawk: The fact that even a bronze bolt achieves max velocity based on the maximum speed the string can travel reveals that the equation is all wrong. Yes, the things you stated would play a factor, but over the space of 10 squares there would be close to 0 air resistance playing a part. Before air resistance starts playing a part the engagement range would have to be MASSIVELY larger than what we are testing with, and in that case one would use a bow, not a crossbow and arc the projectile to cause a greater end velocity as you get gravity helping you provide a continued acceleration effect at the tail end of the flight. EDIT: Going to throw on one more comment related to the physics involved... Crossbows were obscenly good at penetrating plate armor, due to the fact that the bolt was fired at an obscene rate of speed compared to a standard bow, and the projectile was solid metal. The E value was through the roof, as was the strength of the bolt(would not shatter on impact, reducing force, which a wooden arrow shaft would do if fired from a xbow against a hard surface). At the end of the day how you obtain E makes 0 difference (by mass or velocity) Higher E over smaller area = more penetration. Take for example a modern firearm: Anti-Armor = high E and high projectile integrity to increase piercing Anti-personal = bit lower E and low low strength to increase impact and minimize piercing (a bullet that goes straight through causes much less damage than one that tears apart a huge chunk of flesh and stays in) The mass of the object has very little to do with it, the anti-armor is likely made of steel, and the anti-personal is likely made of lead, both have a similar density. |
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"The fact that even a bronze bolt achieves max velocity based on the maximum speed the string can travel reveals that the equation is all wrong. Yes, the things you stated would play a factor, but over the space of 10 squares." Isn't 10 squares like 60-80 feet or something? That's quite a bit of flight time. Even a baseball being thrown from a smaller distance has significant resistance. Otherwise you couldn't have curve balls. "...gravity helping you provide a continued acceleration effect at the tail end of the flight." It also decelerates when the projectile goes up, canceling out the effect. |
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A baseball is a whole different ball game. The forward facing surface area 10x as much, and the flight time to reach destination is also 10x as much. that puts you at about a factor of 100 compared to the impact it has on a bolt fired from a xbow. "It also decelerates when the projectile goes up, canceling out the effect. " Not quite, since air resistance is not linear in nature, but we wont get into that, suffice to say that the end velocity does end up being higher than a projectile fired straight would if you removed the force of gravity and only included air resistance. |
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http://www.crossbows-bolts.com/crossbow-bolts.php Actually a 16" or 22" bolt with 3 feathers looks to have a pretty close surface area compared to a MLB baseball (27.2 in^2). http://www.thebeckoning.com/medieval/crossbow/cross_l_v_c.html 138.7 fps was the speed of a bolt http://www.efastball.com/baseball/pitching/grips/average-pitching-speed-by-age-group/ 75-95 MPH for pitching (or 110-140 fps) |
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Only the forward facing surface area has any real effect on air resistance, not the whole thing... I am not even quite sure how to respond to your "same surface area" comment. Also, I came up with a velocity of about 300 fps when it comes to xbows through a Google search, but I will admit my source was for a modern xbow (though you are using a modern baseball pitcher for your example, so meh). Honestly, the fact that you stated the surface area was pretty close is reason enough for me to stop this conversation, it does not seem that you have an accurate grasp on the basic physics involved here. Toady can decide on his own when he gets around to fixing it, because I think we both realize the current model is not accurate. |
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Another point to consider on the weight of projectiles issue: (I am not an expert) A less massive projectile (barring things like spin stability, which period weapons are unlikely to have) is more easily wobbled around by wind and such. Example: throwing an iron feather: it goes where you want. Throwing a regular feather will see it waft around. Perhaps this could help explain the lower damage of ineffectually light (by density, not size) weapons? |
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To do the same damage as a bronze bolt (at 9000kg/m3) an adamantine bolt would need to be traveling 21 times as fast. or around mach 4. Obviously this doesn't even take into account air resistance. Since arrow speed is based on the speed of the bowstring, the recovery speed of the spring rather than the weight of the projectile. I think even bruises are unrealistically high damage. These bolts should have no more effect than a feather or gust of wind. |
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Also mihala is not entirely correct. Arrows have significant lift resistance (both body and fletching) and turbulent drag in addition to frontal surface area resistance, they even have a small viscous resistance related to total surface area. This is why the bullet shape is used for high speed rifles even though a longer balanced cylinder would seem to have a greater penetration in a vacuum. Its a balancing act between velocity squared and air resistance. A teardrop shape is ideal, but unshootable. Since as I mentioned above, adamantine arrows would need to be fired at speeds greater than high speed rifles, a cylinder is actually a terrible shape. From an air resistance perspective, it would lose most of it's energy staying straight. |
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80' is pretty short range with a crossbow. Air resistance is not much of a factor over such short distances. I wouldn't imagine you'd see much effect of air resistance until somewhere in the 200'+ ballpark. |
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god i love the smell of scientist in the morning (== darkfred is right) |
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Reminder sent to: Toady One Hey Toady -- since bolts have been improved, this bug and 0001362 might be regarded as fixed. |
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Not so fast Footkerchief! Bolts are apparently completely useless against armored targets :( Static goblins get peppered with 2000 iron bolts in fortress mode and just stand there with not a scratch on them, EVERY shot having been deflected. |
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Further testing: Given enough time (and by decreasing the range a bit for more hits) they will eventually shoot off every unarmored extremity (toes, fingers, ears). The problem seems to be in armor vs bolts. |
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Huh... in 31.10, I've seen many of my armored dwarves (bronze) killed by a squad of gobelin archers. Or maybe arrows act differently than bolts ? |
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I did a lot of testing in the arena today - dwarves shooting goblins with iron bolts. Goblins in groups with copper, bronze, iron and steel armor, with and without silk clothing - 8 groups total, 10 goblins each. The bolts were equally deadly to all groups. About 30 iron bolts were fired per each killed goblin, half of them missed, some were blocked, about 10 hits on average per goblin I think. Seems ok considering that crossbows are meant to be no longer insta-kill weapons. Also keep in mind that once a goblin gets hurt and goes prone, it is much harder to hit him with ranged weapons. So balance seems ok to me. @Lord Byte: Are you using 0.31.10? Is your fort copied from earlier version? If yes then have you updated item_weapon, item_ammo and material_template files IN YOUR SAVE FOLDER with the new ones from 0.31.10? |
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@Rafal99: It's a freshly genned .10 Fortress, I haven't played since .03 because of the broken military. There are two possible reasons as my last fight DID work out very well... Either the wooden crossbows were causing the discrepancy OR those ambushing lashers had extreme armor / dodging skills, as the siege a season later was broken easily thanks to the same Marksdwarves. I'm thinking it's the wooden crossbows (some were even firing bone bolts and blew through a goblin's helmet breaking the skull and tearing the brain out ^_^ ) |
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Has anyone done any more experimentation on this? It sounds like it might be fixed. |
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Bolts are now overpowered if anything. |
Date Modified | Username | Field | Change |
---|---|---|---|
2010-04-08 15:40 | Milaha | New Issue | |
2010-04-08 15:45 | thvaz | Note Added: 0002180 | |
2010-04-08 15:50 | G-Flex | Note Added: 0002183 | |
2010-04-08 17:41 | Milaha | Note Added: 0002203 | |
2010-04-08 17:58 | Milaha | Note Edited: 0002203 | |
2010-04-08 18:06 | Milaha | Note Edited: 0002203 | |
2010-04-08 18:17 | SirPenguin | Note Added: 0002207 | |
2010-04-08 18:20 | Milaha | Note Edited: 0002203 | |
2010-04-08 18:22 | Milaha | Note Edited: 0002203 | |
2010-04-08 18:24 | Greyhawk | Note Added: 0002208 | |
2010-04-08 18:31 | Milaha | Note Added: 0002212 | |
2010-04-08 18:34 | Milaha | Note Edited: 0002212 | |
2010-04-08 18:41 | Greyhawk | Note Added: 0002215 | |
2010-04-08 18:48 | Milaha | Note Edited: 0002212 | |
2010-04-08 18:50 | Milaha | Note Added: 0002217 | |
2010-04-08 18:54 | Milaha | Note Edited: 0002217 | |
2010-04-08 18:57 | Milaha | Note Edited: 0002217 | |
2010-04-08 19:04 | Greyhawk | Note Added: 0002222 | |
2010-04-08 19:21 | Milaha | Note Added: 0002224 | |
2010-04-08 19:21 | Milaha | Note Edited: 0002224 | |
2010-04-20 09:46 |
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Summary | Adamantine Bolts do less damage => Adamantine bolts do less damage, bolts ineffective in general |
2010-04-20 09:46 |
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Relationship added | parent of 0001262 |
2010-04-20 09:46 |
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Relationship deleted | parent of 0001262 |
2010-04-20 09:46 |
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Relationship added | parent of 0001362 |
2010-04-20 10:22 | quatch | Note Added: 0004348 | |
2010-04-20 11:07 | darkfred | Note Added: 0004355 | |
2010-04-20 11:27 | darkfred | Note Edited: 0004355 | |
2010-04-20 11:43 | darkfred | Note Added: 0004363 | |
2010-04-20 11:47 | darkfred | Note Edited: 0004363 | |
2010-04-20 12:04 | Squirrelloid | Note Added: 0004366 | |
2010-04-20 12:37 | Nimrod | Note Added: 0004372 | |
2010-07-05 16:39 |
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Relationship added | child of 0000033 |
2010-07-15 08:38 |
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Relationship added | has duplicate 0002041 |
2010-07-15 08:40 |
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Note Added: 0010354 | |
2010-07-20 15:09 | Lord Byte | Note Added: 0010747 | |
2010-07-20 15:17 |
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Relationship added | has duplicate 0002774 |
2010-07-21 07:08 | Lord Byte | Note Added: 0010777 | |
2010-07-21 10:52 | OzoneGrif | Note Added: 0010786 | |
2010-07-22 04:05 | Rafal99 | Note Added: 0010807 | |
2010-07-22 09:03 | Lord Byte | Note Added: 0010823 | |
2010-07-22 09:06 | Lord Byte | Note Edited: 0010823 | |
2010-07-25 14:43 |
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Relationship replaced | related to 0000033 |
2011-04-21 08:53 | Kogut | Tag Attached: CLOSE THIS | |
2011-05-08 14:26 | Logical2u | Tag Detached: CLOSE THIS | |
2011-05-08 14:27 | Logical2u | Note Added: 0017662 | |
2011-05-08 14:27 | Logical2u | Tag Attached: AWAITING UPDATE | |
2012-02-20 18:54 |
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Note Added: 0020311 | |
2012-02-20 18:54 |
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Status | new => resolved |
2012-02-20 18:54 |
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Resolution | open => no change required |
2012-02-20 18:54 |
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Assigned To | => user6 |
2012-02-20 18:54 |
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Tag Detached: AWAITING UPDATE |