What is the strongest known bendable material?

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The discussion centers on identifying the strongest bendable material with high tensile yield strength, particularly for applications like crossbow strings. Carbon nanotubes are suggested as a potential candidate due to their impressive strength properties. Zylon is mentioned as another strong fiber, although its practical use as a flexible string remains uncertain. The conversation also touches on the feasibility of creating extremely high draw-weight crossbows, with one user recounting an experience with a powerful custom-built crossbow. Overall, the focus is on the balance between strength and practicality in material selection for specific applications.
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By "bendable" I mean "you can run it through a pulley and it retains tension", and by "strong" I refer to tensile yield strength.

Thanks in advance.
 
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Carbon nano-tubes I suppose - could you provide some context, though?
 
russ_watters said:
Carbon nano-tubes I suppose - could you provide some context, though?

Strongest crossbow string, basically.
 
So is Zylon usable as rope/flexible string?
 
Don't know. I have only seen it used soaked with epoxy to reinforce high-field magnets. Off the spool the stuff is a bit ... hairy, so for a string you'd have to insert it into some kind of shell, the way climbing ropes are built.
 
The question seems odd - a crossbow isn't that demanding of an application, so you really don't need anything close to the strongest.
 
russ_watters said:
The question seems odd - a crossbow isn't that demanding of an application, so you really don't need anything close to the strongest.

That depends on the draw weight. There isn't really a limit on how stiff you can make the prods, after all. I was trying to work out if you could build a 10 ton draw-weight crossbow.
 
Ive seen this done, some guys I worked with years ago built a crossbow based on plans for a trigger they found online. They used a leaf spring from an old van and a 10t cable as the string. The arrow was 20mm dia stainless rod, with a ground tungsten carbide tip brazed on the end. Long story short, it needed to be cocked with the overhead crane and fired from a vice, it shot straight through a solid brick wall, then it was declared evil and promptly dismantled.
 
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Carbon nanotubes
 

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