Postby Webmaster » Mon Mar 01, 2004 12:55 pm
In our destruction test here in Houston a few weeks ago we broke two swords. The first was an Angelsword single hander, which snapped at the shoulder right at the base of the tang. I've seen two other Angelswords break the exact same way, although their blades are very durable. This was done while making some rather deep cuts in a 2x4.
The other was, I believe, a Del Tin longsword hit against the now infamous cinder block in our "castle wall" simulation. The tang was severely bent sideways, and the last 6-8 inches of the blade actually wrapped around the brick and snapped in the middle. We determined this because there was edge damage on both corners of the brick and none in the middle. It was a very violent impact which no blade should be reasonably expected to survive, but the tang should have performed better.
For edge failures that did not result in the blade actually breaking, look up the thread from last year on the Angus Trim swords tested at the International Event. There's pages of discussion on proper edge geometry there.
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Stacy Clifford
ARMA Webmaster