What accounts for the clearly better performance of the Japanese sword ("katana") over the European longsword in the testing below?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EDkoj932 ... re=related
Both swords do well against cabbages and coconuts. But the katana beats the longsword in cleaving a block of ice; it alone slices a leather-armored dummy; and it appears to put more hurt on a steel breastplate.
I've seen several general "longsword vs katana"-type discussions in these forums (forgive me if this video has already been discussed and I missed it), and I'm aware of the general ideas and debunkings that have been put forth. I'm squarely in the camp that sees any differences in weapon performance as due to specific factors of physics, material properties, technique, etc., and never by "this one's just kewler, dude".
So without going into an impossibly broad discussion of all swords and all circumstances, and putting aside some of the silliness in the video (like the insinuation that non-katana fighting is "about bashing swords together"), I'm wondering what likely accounts for the visibly better results of the katana in this particular video.
Are the testers using the longsword wrongly in some way? (The sword swinger uses two different angles in the leather armor test, which seems a poor testing method…)
Is this particular katana possibly sharper than this particular longsword, or stiffer, or different in some other way that's significant for these particular tests?
Or is the longsword somehow hampered by harmonic vibrations from the narrator's obnoxious shouting? : )
Any thoughts?
