From decent resources, I am reading that large Renaissance maces and pollaxes were "affective" against plate armor, but how affective are they? There are a lot of forum posts on the web and companies selling their weapons that they tare up plate armor or even puncture through breaking skulls and ribs. They point to a specific knife and sword company which will go unnamed, with a video of particular bludgeoning weapon that dents with a hammer and penetrates with the back hook of it. I have a suspicion that armor is much to soft, possibly too thin. There is another video on youtube of Mike Loads hitting a far more believable good chest piece with a similar weapon and it barely scratches the armor but makes ballistic jell underneath wobble, showing that shock would transmit and passably hurting the person underneath. No definitive amount of force of shock was given. I pointed out in the weapon product test video on youtube how the armor might be too soft, pointing at the Mike Loades video, but was told since the product test video had no backdrop, the armor would be more easily destroyed.
Again in my Ewart Oakshott book, I only gleam they are affective but no specific type of damage. I always thought "affective" meant "hurt" or stun a person just enough to throw them off a little. More so then a sword, but the armor would still give good protection. I thought a one handed mace might again stun if hit in a plated helmed head, but would not do much if hit in the chest that was covered in plate. Different on a pollaxe, concussion or kill if hit in a plated helmed head, but still would only hurt and not cause severe trauma. I would think neither would destroy the armor, at worst breaking a joint of the face protector on the helm but not the severe crushing of it or a back spike penetrating.
How wrong am I? Mind you, I am speaking of direct hits on to plate. Anybody have enough experience with the treatises to give an informed opinion or historical accounts of what happens to direct bludgeon on plate? I am not an ARMA member and not nearly as well read as I should be
