However, the last blow against the narrower Albion blade caused a 2-inch long span on the Raven to literally crack and fold at 90-degrees. Although I have seen sword edges bend, deform, and even shatter, I have never seen one crack and fold before (it’s hard to make out in the photos, but it resembles the non-linear cracks you’d find on bread crust).
This was particularly odd since another portion of this very same weapon (seen in the photos as the slight crescent distortion near the new fold) had previously struck a piece of iron rebar at full-force and only suffered a small depression.
This Raven sword is about 4 years old and I still consider it a fine weapon, so it was quite dismaying to see how poorly it responded to what should be a common action for any sword of this kind: striking away another lighter blade edge to flat. We have the instance on video but it shows nothing unusual. I cannot speculate on the cause at this point, except to note that the Albion blade, as would be expected, had only a minor scratch on the subtle riser of its flat. It may be a case of a weak point on a hard edge striking a much harder flat.
Either way, real swords did historically engage and strike other swords and if they can’t reasonably hold up, I think modern makers are still missing something.
JC



