Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:I suppose you are refering to the 4 pictures found at page 4 in
this article?
If so, I can see some differences between what Casper does in the video and what you show...
Casper makes two movements with his sword, first backward to arm the cut and then forward to deliver it. He is stepping forward hence, if I understood the quotes correctly, he is not in Silver's true distance at the beginning. His cut ends approximately at the time when his foot lands. So yes, his arms are faster, and the first motion could be conceived as an entering technique.
In your sequence, you just make a move forward with your hands. Hence, you strike the target roughly halfway through your pace. This is because you did not slow your hands and Silver's principles still hold... At the end of your strike, on the fourth picture, it can be seen that your body has advanced further.
And yet I think your hands were slightly slowed down by the great arc up you did. So I believe you could have landed a significant strike even before half of your step.
Thus, either you were closer to your assumed target than Casper was, and the step is just there to generate momentum but you could have made your strike without it, either you were a full pace from the target and in that case, it might be tactically unwise to be forced to continue forward after the strike, or to strike before covering the distance. If it missed, you are putting the adversary in good position...
As I see it, Silver's true time is a tactical concept to avoid telegraphing. But since both strikes discussed here are out of Silver's true distance, perhaps it is unwise to apply the same principles to them?
If the point of the Zornhau is to generate power at the expense of tactical considerations, perhaps it does not have to respect true times? After all, we don't respect them when cutting firewood either

Regards
VLC: Of course our strikes are different due to the fact that our longswords were in differing initial positions since CB started from
Ochs and I started from
Zornhut; and his forward stepping was
treten and mine was
springen. (So what is your point?) Hence CB had to make an upward motion (not backward, as you fallaciously assert) which becomes forward motion as carried by the arms, body & legs (in that order), done so while he advances. (Hence it is all one smooth motion actually.) His movement in that video was most certainly in accordance with Silver's true-time.
(Definitely more so than the ridiculous
tameshigiri demonstration I saw just last night on a TV show called
Weapon Masters, done by some
iaido "expert" who cocked back his sword, then stepped, then swung forward, then cut -- ludicrous. )
My own sequential photos demonstrate the most forceful way (thus via
springen) to do
Zornhau. My
Zornhau was meant to reach & hit a target at fullest distance of my range for hewing the foe mortally. It was in accordance with Silver's true-time and with Liechtenauer's advice to step with striking. My strike was tactically sound for its intended purpose, as sound as the leaping attack of a cougar or a leopard
VLC: You did not get that, your perception & interpretation thereof were incorrect. (Perhaps even relativistic, no?) You either are unfamiliar with athletic fencing movements or actual sparring, perhaps never attempting such yourself. If you know better, you could post your own video or photos to substantiate your claims. Maybe when you have time away from doing your applied mathematics research you could publish something about applied fencing to educate us.