Postby Casper Bradak » Fri Jan 21, 2005 11:45 am
Theoretically a bar grill couldn't hurt, but it tends to give people an a-historical false sense of security, an over-estimation of its effectiveness, and is rather pointless given what we do.
It's not that they didn't think of it, it's that it was largely useless. You see things resembling bar grills in late medieval tourneys, which by no coincidence, they were using fat clubs for striking, rather like a mean version of SCA sparring.
For the most part, if you're doing anything involving striking the armour of your opponent, you need to rethink how to kill an adversary in armour, and read the fencing manuals.
A bar grill will generally not stop edges, even from most of our simulators, and it certainly won't stop thrusts, the main thing sent to openings of armour. The face is a hard target, and blows from the lateral portions of weaponry are more likely to strike the helmet; stopping an SCA guy in his tracks with a bonk, but it won't do squat to a real combatant. Even if struck forcefully and squarely to the face, the helmet will likely stop significant penetration (intentionally).
If someone fought for real wearing an SCA style bar grill, it would obviously be seen by the opponent and worked around, likely not even changing the techniques used to that opening anyway.
The visors on the helmets linked by Allen not only have narrower openings, they are intentionally made vertical rather than horizontal to negate most blows, but they have a brim to keep even overhand blows from penetrating, rather than a simple stop rib seen over most horizontal sights. Aside from all that, they were designed in the 17th century for use by mounted pistoleers or lancers, and faced swords far less frequently than medieval helms.