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I'm not sure what you mean by "stronger". Would you mind explaining?
Jonathan Ellis wrote:I'm not sure what you mean by "stronger". Would you mind explaining?
according to modern marvels on he history channel the katana blade has a profile perfected for cutting; with an edge that "never needs sharpening". According to the discovery channel's weapon master show the construction differs with the "handle" and "blade" steels being folded separately of two different types of steel then forge welded together as the form is created. this creates a soft core and a very hard edge that stays sharp even after cutting. In contrast the european sword is made of one piece of steel that is of one type of steel. The core is softer because of the tempering methods. The edge must be sharpened on a regular basis and cutting edge is not designed to cut through people(from shoulder to hip) in one pass. This info was presented to me on these programs and is the basis of my thought process. If these things are true then it would seem to make sense to pair the strongest fighting system with the strongest tool. if this information is not true then please tell me what I missed what is wrong and why.
Jonathan Ellis wrote:according to modern marvels on he history channel the katana blade has a profile perfected for cutting;
Jonathan Ellis wrote:with an edge that "never needs sharpening".
Jonathan Ellis wrote:According to the discovery channel's weapon master show the construction differs with the "handle" and "blade" steels being folded separately of two different types of steel then forge welded together as the form is created. this creates a soft core and a very hard edge that stays sharp even after cutting.
Jonathan Ellis wrote: In contrast the european sword is made of one piece of steel that is of one type of steel. The core is softer because of the tempering methods. The edge must be sharpened on a regular basis and cutting edge is not designed to cut through people(from shoulder to hip) in one pass.
This begs the question: for cutting what? A katana is definitely not as good at cutting wood as an axe
and not as capable at delicate tissue work as a scalpel
the edge geometry (the shape of the edge itself) among katana changed overtime, just as it did in European swords.
There is an entire occupation (that has been made into an art) concerned with sharpening and polishing katana
it does not yield the mythical blade that cuts through other swords, rocks, machine gun barrels, or a horse and rider in one fell swoop
I can't say whether or not the European swords were designed to cut from shoulder to hip in one pass, or whether the Japanese swords were either. (Is there any documented evidence of this?)
However, I do know both were designed to kill. As far as I can see, against an unarmored target, both swords are easily capable of doing their job.
Trying to mix the two, as I said before, would be a bit like trying to play tennis with a badminton racket.
Jonathan - I am going to echo Stacy's comments here. Do a search of this Forum, not to mention the articles, and you will have more than enough information for you to draw your own conclusions.
A program on The History Channel is not what I would call a "primary source."
Jonathan Ellis wrote:if the had the ability to they would have made their swords from titanium alloy because it is stronger and lighter than steel.
Jonathan Ellis wrote:hello again all.
A better idea of what i want to do is play tennis but instead of using the traditional wooden racket I want to play with the state of the art carbon-fiber one. A katana is still a sword and is within the same "sport".
Jonathan Ellis wrote:well you have one thing right I do believe that the katana is a superior blade. I also think that the japanese swordsmanship is inferior to WMA. so yes I am trying a hybrid(if I thought that the longsword was superior then this article would not exist). The first thing I have to address is that stupid tennis metaphor. You cannot play tennis with a badmitten racket because it was not designed to take that kind of force. It is a little insulting because it implies that the katana is inferior, not even equal, to the longsword. I have read the article of no beast blade, and I must say that while he is right that no blade is better than another because each has a job to do also understand that most of the jobs for swords have dried up. This is the fate of most weapons: as technology improves that which cannot be upgraded becomes obsolete and discarded. This leaves two varieties of sword in my mind: one handed coupled with something or two handed. In my mind the construction of a two handed weapon should be long enough to exceed the reach of one handed swords but light enough to be used with one hand, so the length will be shorter than a true two handed sword,this leaves the hand and a half sword and the katana for what I want now does this help explain what I mean? Also, about the titanium I'm glad that you have knowledge on this and am happy to be wrong but the point was that tradition meant squat to them and if something better came along they would have adopted it. If I am wrong which I might be please explain why I am wrong. I am not that intelligent and need things spelled out for me. thank you for your time.
Jonathan Ellis wrote:well you have one thing right I do believe that the katana is a superior blade. I also think that the japanese swordsmanship is inferior to WMA. so yes I am trying a hybrid(if I thought that the longsword was superior then this article would not exist). The first thing I have to address is that stupid tennis metaphor. You cannot play tennis with a badmitten racket because it was not designed to take that kind of force. It is a little insulting because it implies that the katana is inferior, not even equal, to the longsword. I have read the article of no beast blade, and I must say that while he is right that no blade is better than another because each has a job to do also understand that most of the jobs for swords have dried up. This is the fate of most weapons: as technology improves that which cannot be upgraded becomes obsolete and discarded. This leaves two varieties of sword in my mind: one handed coupled with something or two handed. In my mind the construction of a two handed weapon should be long enough to exceed the reach of one handed swords but light enough to be used with one hand, so the length will be shorter than a true two handed sword,this leaves the hand and a half sword and the katana for what I want now does this help explain what I mean? Also, about the titanium I'm glad that you have knowledge on this and am happy to be wrong but the point was that tradition meant squat to them and if something better came along they would have adopted it. If I am wrong which I might be please explain why I am wrong. I am not that intelligent and need things spelled out for me. thank you for your time.
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