Hi all,
sorry to bump this thread, but I wanted to address a problem that occured with two of my swords at the International event. I am fairly certain that everyone saw one of Stewart Feils guards break on his arming sword during his prize play, and I broke the guard on one of my longswords during free play. Both of the guards that broke were from a prototype guard design that I no longer make or sell. Also, as a result of that experience I have decided to beef up the thickness of my guards from 3/4 inch material to 1 inch material (as reccomended by Eric Winkler). Thanks Eric.
The reason that the two guards broke was because they were both placed under a shoulder step up where the blade went from the width of the handle (where the guard was attached) to the width of the ricasso. This created a pivot point that allowed the guards to butt up against and create a great deal of stress that allowed them to break. I no longer attach the guards at this position (and only ever did so on my first six wasters), instead I now attach them to the wider ricasso area which allows for more flex in the cross. I would like to add that the new attachment point on the ricasso is where the guard was placed on every weapon I delivered to the International Event - no one recieved a weapon with a prototype guard attached to the shoulder area of the grip.
I don't remember if Stew's cross broke against a plastic waster or a wood waster, but my longsword guard was broken when playing against a wood waster with my plastic waster. This is why one should only use plastic against plastic and wood against wood. <shrug>
Once again, I would like to stress that both of these weapons that failed had cross designs that were prototypes no longer in production and that I am replacing Stew's sword with my current design (at no extra cost to him) and I am going to also be retiring my longsword and replacing it with my current design.
Thanks to everyone who has purchased something from me. I appreciate your business. If you have a failure with one of my products, please contact me and I will look at your problem. If it is not the result of abuse, I will take good care of you.
thanks again.
Brian Hunt.
GFS
P.S. I would like to add that most of my equipment is built to try and withstand the gentle use of Stewart. I alway figure that if Stew can't break it, it will survive anyone.
http://www.paulushectormair.com
http://www.emerytelcom.net/users/blhunt/sales.htm