Hello,
in building wasters for basket hilted swords, I came across a strange phenomenon: I wanted a backsword with handling qualities that my puny arm could easily manage and that resembled the kind illustrated by Miller (short, thin).
As I saw in the Edimburg castle and elsewhere, Scottish swords come with any sort of blade shape and one just has to chose the one he [censored] (sword manufacturer today seem to reproduce only the broader ones, that's sad).
Well the strange thing is that since my wasters seemed to handle poorly, I attribuited it to the weight of the blades and made them thinner, which caused them to handle more poorly.
After considering the problem, I took weight out of the hilts and things went better, to the point I realized I could have left the blades heavier...
Discussing of sabres with Matt Easton time ago, he told me that the best cutters among military sabres were the ones with moderate hilt weight, even if the sabres themselves were light.
Has anyone studied the relation between the weights of blades and hilts and handling qualities of the swords?
For what I've seen, I'd say heavy hilt and light blade is not good, light hilt and light or heavy blade is good, as long as good balance is kept, heavy hilt and heavy blade is good only for a strong arm.
My impression was that the weight in front and to the sides of the grip has an influence over the handling of the sword and not necessarily a good influence, in fact I do not like cup hilted rapiers as much as lighter hilted ones, for the sensation of having a lot of weight just in front of the grip, with wrist fatigue coming from this.
