Matthew_Anderson wrote:I built some 48" longsword simulators with the 1/2" sch.80 cores about a year ago. They were nice and light and handled well, but were just too "whippy" for my taste. Photographs of us sparring with them showed that they flexed a lot, even just swinging them through the air, before making contact. I have some 36" one handed weapons built with the 1/2" sch.80 pvc and they work pretty well, but I just think it's too flexible for a longsword. I even tried the old dowel inside the PVC trick, which stiffened them up quite a bit, but the dowels broke in several pieces within a few bouts and the weapons turned into noodles again.
Yeah I should have explained this in more detail, I was going to wait until after the field test was done and I had a third party testimonial to backup my claims.
The reason the 36" arming swords worked (and weren't 'whippy') but the 48" longsword didn't work is due to the physics of pvc.
Not that I understand it completley but after 20 years of using this stuff I'm starting to get a clue.
Basically, the wider (in fractions of an inch) and heavier gauge (sch 80 vs sch 60 or sch 40) the PVC the longer you can get away with the core and have it not be 'whippy'. There is always a certain cutoff point in terms of length. Before that point it will stay rigid, beyond it, you can increasingly bend the stuff.
You can easily test this for yourself. Any PVC, even 1", will be very whippy in the 10' lengths they have at the hardware store. No pvc whips at all down to say, 24".
The thing is, with different length the 'whip' factor kicks in rather dramatically, it can be a matter of just a couple of inches.
The limit I have found for the core on a longsword with 1/2 sch 80 is about 43 -44". Any longer than that and you get ''whip factor'. So why did I say 46-48"? You start with a 43" core. When you add a pommel, thats 3", a thrusting tip should go another 2". That gives you a 48" total length.
It took a lot of trial and error to figure this out but I stake my reputation on this, it works. I have 3 longswords now that I have made this way and they are working just fine. In fact due to the thinner core they are more sword-like in their handling and a bit nimbler in addition to being safer to use IMO.
Due to other factors of "the physics of PVC" the dowels never work, incidentally, I highly reccomend against them.
JR