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Parker E. Brown wrote:The tone of the steel is likely going to be related to how well the sword blade was hardened and tempered.
[...]
The strength of your tap gives the amplitude and where your hand holds the sword is necessarily a node as waves travel back and forth through the steel. [...] Good swords are generally more flexible than crappy ones so they maintain a higher amplitude vibration for longer, they do in fact "sing".
Chris Ouellet wrote:Any freely rotating point such as the cross is not a node and can't be. The hand is much more rigid than the junction between hilt and blade it is the fixed point about which the blade rotates. While there's a change in Young's modulus going from a free modulus to a constrained modulus at the hilt this isn't as significant as the hand.
Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:After some further experimentation, there seems to be more about it than just the blade...
I tried again with my swords and it seems that the long-lasting tune is in fact produced by the quillons. If I hit the swords while leaving the quillon free, I get a long sound, whereas if I hit the sword with the forefinger layed flush along the quillon, the tune quickly disappears. Just hitting the quillon also produces a long lasting sound.
[...]
All of this is probably not relevant to combat application, but fun
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