AI Article Synopsis

  • The clothing system popular among cavalrymen during the English Civil War consisted of a linen shirt, wool waistcoat, and buff-coat.
  • Ballistic tests to determine the projectile velocity required to penetrate this clothing suggested that it would offer limited protection, as the ballistic velocity was much lower than the effective combat range of that time.
  • Comparative analysis with historical medical texts indicated that while the clothing might afford some defense against ricochets, the risk of wounding through it remained significant.

Article Abstract

One type of clothing system used in the English Civil War, more common amongst cavalrymen than infantrymen, was the linen shirt, wool waistcoat and buff-coat. Ballistic testing was conducted to estimate the velocity at which 50% of 12-bore lead spherical projectiles (V) would be expected to perforate this clothing system when mounted on gelatine (a tissue simulant used in wound ballistic studies). An estimated six-shot V for the clothing system was calculated as 102 m/s. The distance at which the projectile would have decelerated from the muzzle of the weapon to this velocity in free flight was triple the recognised effective range of weapons of the era suggesting that the clothing system would provide limited protection for the wearer. The estimated V was also compared with recorded bounce-and-roll data; this suggested that the clothing system could provide some protection to the wearer from ricochets. Finally, potential wounding behind the clothing system was investigated; the results compared favourably with seventeenth century medical writings.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7417417PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00414-020-02378-xDOI Listing

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