Postby Shane Smith » Sat Apr 03, 2004 10:52 am
Hi Ryan,
We did start out our armoured work wearing visors for maximum safety,but as time went on and our understanding of the technical applications increased,it became obvious that several (and in some cases,nearly all) armoured plates from certain source-texts show no,or abbreviated, visors for a good reason. With my pig-face visor on,visibility is very poor and as such,all of the subtle,timing dependant techniques become much more difficult. At speed in intense freeplay,the difference is even more obvious. To go one further,one day I was watching an intense freeplay bout between Matt Anderson and Joel Thompson and I was shocked at just how very often the blade barely missed the eye-slot,even in leveraging. After that, I decided that visibilty and an actual barrier between the eye and the opposing blade was paramount so I went to no visor with safety glasses for modest armoured work. For intense half-sword freeplay,we have had to make unfortunate and restrictive accomodations in the interest of safety ,ie. no thrusts to the face and wearing the visor. I think the way we train now is about as safe as you can make hanessfechten without sacrificing martial effectiveness and even then,anyone that's seen us train knows we're still pretty heavy-handed on the throws and the like(It aint knitting class after-all). <img src="/forum/images/icons/wink.gif" alt="" /> <img src="/forum/images/icons/grin.gif" alt="" />
Shane Smith~ARMA Forum Moderator
ARMA~VAB
Free Scholar