Postby Brian Hunt » Thu Jan 27, 2005 11:54 am
Hey Allen,
that is a good question. Since I have never had the opportunity before to try and describe how stiff I want a blade for manufacture before, I don't have a pat answer for you. I would say that you want a blade that isn't floppy, that the point cannot be pushed offline due to the flex in the blade with easy to moderate/moderate-hard pressure. I hate blades that wiggle like a noodle when you do a quick action or when you encounter another persons blade. I have tried to fence with blades where the point "followed" the rest of the blade due to how easily the thing flexed while simply doing a normal action, such as a cavatione or a remise.There has to be some "give" to the blade, otherwise it won't be tough, it will be too hard and break, but all the reproduction or flexible blades I have yet handled, including sharps, all err on being too flexible and sproingy like a spring. Of course I have yet to handle every blade that is being manufactured out there, but I haven't seen one yet that I would consider to be stiff enough. Of course when you have an extremly stiff blade, you must train with that in mind, your training partner will take the full force of your thrust, it will not be mitigated by the flex of the blade, therefore control is of paramount interest.This is of course the point (forgive the pun <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" /> ) to a thrusting weapon, stiff enough to impart all of the force you put behind it into pentration, not flex. A lot of the recreation groups out there rely on the safty built into the flex of a blade, rather than control. This can, and often does, comprimise their techniques.
take this for what it's worth to you, and I hope some of it helps.
Brian Hunt
GFS