http://www.angustrimdirect.com/models/35/35home.htm
The other one was modelled after this piece that was lack of the crossguard but with a bigger basket in our version.
http://www.angustrimdirect.com/models/35/35_600w.jpg
I tried the latter one first in a couple training sessions with my student and found that the basket-hilt sword was very dominating against the german style longsword. Since the basket-hilt provided total protection to the hand, the sword wielder can bind with the knuckle and defeat the longsword's power through leverage advantage. It can easily beat the strikes from the longsword aside, or stay in bind while using the offhand to push the oppnent aside as the sword wielder wishes. From that training, I figured I can take a basket-hilt sword simply as a buckler with sword blade in one hand, giving me another hand for free movement. I know for political correct reason there's no superior sword, but hell, I can't help to think that's so superior indeed! I can't imagine what if I have a shield on the left arm too.... damn too dominating.
Today I tried the first basket-hilt sword we made in our weekly open sparring session and took videos. Here're the results:
http://www.rsw.com.hk/basket-hilt-1.zip
18mb
Against my student using a Chinese Jian. I found that it was a more difficult opponent to face for the basket hilt because it can disengage easier than the longsword. So not as much leverage advantage as I can gain from binding with a longsword. But still I have plenty advantages and the result showed.
http://www.rsw.com.hk/basket-hilt-2.zip
13.7mb
Partial video against a friend who is traditionally trained in katana. Fighting against the katana gave me a lot more familiarity than against the Chinese Jian since I've experience in sparring against a longsword. The katana, lacking of length, the cross guard and the false edge, gave me even less troubles than when I faced german style longsword and the result showed more or less a slaughter.
I think I've chosen my next style to practice already.
