• Paragone@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Interesting question…

    Putting grooves in the sides of the arrow, to protect some of the flame from being blown-out, might be a useful improvement…

    The people identifying that oil/petrochemicals burn are right, but you want to have the viscosity of the fuel be such that it’ll burn easily ( low-viscosity, vaporizes easily ) and it won’t be blown-off ( high viscosity, doesn’t burn easily ), so then you have to solve your airspeed, to optimize the fuel for that airspeed…

    So, a fuel which may work well on a 20lbs bow might not work well on a 60lbs draw bow…

    Bullets apparently just use white phosphorous in their tails ( tracers ).

    _ /\ _

  • Windex007@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    When I was a kid I used to make bows and arrows, and so obviously lit arrows on fire.

    You for sure need an accelerant. I recall personally using gas line antifreeze. Otherwise yeah they’ll extinguish pretty much instantly.

    I can’t really remember if the flaming arrows “flamed” the whole flight, or if they extinguished in flight but because of the accelerant were able to reignite once they stopped.