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Stacy Clifford wrote:It depends on what you're trying to penetrate. The physics of stabbing are really pretty simple, the more slender the piercing object, the less mass it has to set aside and the easier it will slide in. Needles are pretty much the ultimate if you're stabbing soft flesh, followed by stilettos and other very slim blades. If you're trying to punch through armor then the structural integrity of the knife comes into play, because you don't want it to break or bend as you're trying to penetrate. Knives of every description accomplish this by having a thicker spine, either along the back of a single edge knife or down the center of a dagger. "Penetrating power" sounds a bit deceptive because a more massive knife is going to encounter greater frictional resistance, but it allows you to hit harder to compensate without breaking the knife. A trapezoidal tip (sounds a bit like a tanto knife) doesn't sound like it does anything for the friction problem, so I would assume that the blade is architecturally very strong to resist breaking under intense impact.
Titanium gets a lot of hype, but that's mostly what it is, hype. Titanium is as structurally strong as steel at a considerably lower mass, which makes it fantastic for load-bearing applications like airplane frames (like the SR-71) that need to be lightweight. However, titanium is not as hard as good carbon steel, which means it dents and scratches easier and won't hold an edge as well. Also, when it comes to swords, there's something to be said for having extra mass. Remember Force = mass x acceleration. If I take away 40% of the mass of a 3 lb. sword by using titanium instead of steel, does that let me swing it 40% faster to equal the same amount of force? At low weights like that, no, probably not, you're going to swing 3 lbs. almost as fast as you're going to swing 2 lbs., so in reality with a titanium sword you would probably lose striking force, which translates to less cut penetration or denting of armor, as well as less mass to oppose a blow defensively, all bad things. Steel is actually better for swords, and probably for knives as well due to the need to hold an edge. If anything I'd rather have titanium armor than a titanium sword because that's where its lightness and strength would have better advantage.
Read this if you really want to get in depth on the physics of it:
http://www.thearma.org/spotlight/GTA/mo ... mpacts.htm
Steven Ott wrote:The bowie knife has really come to prominence in the last few centuries. I don't know if it's european, asian or native american in origin but it's a great design.
Stacy Clifford wrote:Well being a Texan, I have to point out that the Bowie knife is named for Colonel James Bowie, a famed knife fighter and adventurer in the 1820s-1830s who died in the Battle of the Alamo. The most accepted story of its origin is that the original was designed by his brother Rezin and the design was improved to its current form by James himself and popularized by his exploits and reputation.
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