Roy Robinson Stewart wrote:
Surely any sword designed for war would be expected to hit wood or steel occasionally ?
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Agreed.
Moderators: Webmaster, Stacy Clifford
Stacy Clifford wrote:Tires might work alright if you pad them heavily enough to muffle the rebound, but I would be pretty wary about aiming a two-edged sharp sword against a bouncy rubber object. If your edge alignment isn't quite right to dig into the target, it could go flying or skittering off in a direction you weren't planning on. Control after the strike is very important so you can make followup strikes and defenses. I could swear I remember a mention or two on this forum in the past of people almost smacking themselves with their own waster after hitting a tire because they weren't prepared to control the rebound. I'm not saying it's an inherently bad idea, it can work, just do it with respect for the properties of the material.
I second Ran's warning about having backup around whenever you're using sharps, by the way.
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