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CalebChow wrote:Currently our study group uses some pretty bulky plastic tubes with foam on top...but the diameter of the tube is waayyy too thick for a spear and is overall a bit too unwieldy my my liking.
Mr. Sheetz said that in the 2007 IG prize-playing spars there were spears used...and I'm wondering what was used and how I could get/make some for myself.
Thanks!
CalebChow wrote:Currently our study group uses some pretty bulky plastic tubes with foam on top...but the diameter of the tube is waayyy too thick for a spear and is overall a bit too unwieldy my my liking.
Mr. Sheetz said that in the 2007 IG prize-playing spars there were spears used...and I'm wondering what was used and how I could get/make some for myself.
Thanks!
Greg Coffman wrote:I wasn't there for the prize playing, but the spears that I saw during the group melee were all of similar construction. They were made with a pine dowel core, covered with pipe insulation foam with 6-10 inches of foam past the core, and wrapped in duct tape. These were from the DFW group of which I am a satellite member.
We treat these like wooden wasters (and most of the sparring we do is with wood nowadays). They can hit harder that a padded sword and require about as much control as a waster. We have not had any problems with the pine core breaking in dangerous ways. A thrust to the neck can be dangerous, but not really any more than a waster would be. It is deceptive how hard a 6ft or 9ft staff can hit with either a thrust or a strike. I would recommend this construction, but it is certainly not the only way to build a sparring staff. A simpler approach is to mount a tennis ball on the end of a hard wood staff.
Hm, I guess I've been overthinking this a bit.
How much should an accurate spear weigh?
Say, for 6-foot spears and 8-foot spears?
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