Postby Ryan Ricks » Sun May 09, 2004 10:13 pm
it looks like you did a pretty good job, actually. as long as your waster holds up, i think it would be fine.
one thing you may consider doing to make your waster less blade heavy is give it either a distal (thickness) taper or a width taper.
if you have a planer (preferrably a power planer/joiner) you can taper your blade depending on what kind of sword you want. if you want more of a cutting/war sword, you can shave down the thickness of the blade so that it gets thinner as you get towards the point. my waster starts out at 3/4" thick at the hilt, then tapers down to about 3/8ths " thick at the tip. it's also got a slight width taper. as long as you leave enough wood along the strong of the blade where you parry there should be no problems with breakage.
if you want more of a tapered bastard/thrusting sword, you can leave the thickness more or less the same, and taper the width down to a point. the bastard waster i made for my friend starts out 3" wide at the ricasso, and comes to a point with about the diameter of a penny.
if done correctly, each one of these should have a balance similar to what a real sword would, without having to fill the pommel with lead.
you can probably do this with a simple planer, but i imagine it'd take a while. i tried taking pictures of my wasters, but they came out too dark.
ryan
ARMA associate member