- Attaching socketed boltheads to the shaft
- Backstops
- BambooLaminateBow
- Basics of crossbow triggers
- Bibliography
- Blunt boltheads from steel pipe
- Bow design
- Bow woods
- BuildingMaterials
- Category hierarchy
- Crossbow Building Wiki
- Designing medieval nut and trigger crossbow locks
- Designing simple lever and pin crossbow locks
- Designing simple thumb lever and string-catch crossbow locks
- Drilling the nut socket
- Forging boltheads, method 1
- Forging boltheads, method 2
- Forging boltheads, method 3
- Glassfiber as bow material
- Heat treating steel
- Hemp
- InternetResources
- Leather loop protection
- Linen
- Main Page
- MakingMetalNockReinforcement
- Making a medieval-style nut
- Making a medieval European -style crossbow stock
- Making a serving tool
- Making a simple catch lock
- Making a steel prod from a leaf spring
- Making a steel socket for the nut
- Making a wippe
- Making bolt holders
- Making boltheads
- Making bow irons
- Making bowstrings
- Making brass bolt holders for crossbows with nut and trigger locks
- Making fake nocks for use with fletching jigs
- Making reinforced endless loop strings
- Making simple bastard string fasteners
- Making simple endless loop strings
- Making steel bolt holders for pin-trigger crossbows
- Making the guards, method 2
- Making the guards and wedges
- Making the sideplates, method 1
- Making the sideplates, method 2
- Making the stirrup
- Making wooden socket sidepieces
- Measuring bow stretch and compression
- Metal Vanes
- Metal fletching (method 1)
- Metal fletching (method 2)
- Nut with quick-locker pin
- Plan for a simple leaf-spring prod
- Planing bolt shafts
- Reinforced nut socket
- Reinforcing trigger contact surface with high-carbon steel
- Simple (no metal parts) crossbow design
- Steel as bow material
- Stiffening the middle of a leaf-spring bow
- THE CHINESE REPEATING CROSSBOW
- Test page
- Traditional Finnish crossbow with steel bow
- Wood as bow material
- Wooden fletching (method 1)
64
pages
All pages
Special page