Postby s_taillebois » Sun Aug 28, 2005 11:17 pm
Hand made, is relative. The specifications were certainly for the individual. By the period when plate armour had become fully developed (c. 1450's) the European economy/society had recovered from the plague and related troubles of the 1348 era. Accordingly, their logistics for using water/cam powered machinery had also recovered-but the number of tradesmen had been reduced, and the nature of guilds was such they were in no hurry to boost up the apprentices that much, or that quickly. (And despite the information revolution brought on by such as Aldious Minuteas (sp), the guilds still could restrict access to the trade...as an aside, some of the fechtbuchs were part of that same new access to information) So in plate armor, the basic forming/forging could be done with trip hammers and such-and the refinements by hand. Their big problem was metallurgy, by the technology of the time, consistancy was a big issue. Consistant steel as we know it, they couldn't make (or even remelt). So the quality of plate using carbonized iron, no doubt varied quite a bit, and likely gave the craftsmen making it fits. Depending on the temperatures used, their metals could run from quite brittle to fairly malleble (ie irons of the time). The usual method for making a 'steely iron' was prolonged periods in the crucible, at what amounted to as a 'red hot condition'. Good in that it, over the long times involved (sometimes several days) introduced enough carbon to the iron to change it, but bad insofar as gas contamination and unwanted particulates were also more likely and in greater percentages. Ironically, when they did get really close to a steel, they couldn't generally reach the temps needed to remelt and get rid of some of the dross. (that didn't happen until Huntsman's process much later) In that regard, mail, being usually soft iron, despite the labour in making it, would have been easier from a technical view.
They were a bit trapped, insofar as they had the machinery (in their water mill equipment), and certainly the skill (aristocratic money will buy that), but the metallurgy was limiting to their intent.
All the above said, making these things, and getting it right is hard enough with modern metals and equipment...what they could achieve was quite admirable.
(for some reading on the general industrial level of the late medieval/early renn...a book called "the Medieval Machine" by Jean Gimpel's not a bad one).
Steven Taillebois