Posts: 650 Location: Lacey, Wa US
Thu 07 Jun, 2007 1:00 pm
The wrap shot always seemed really silly to me, until my friend came over to do cutting excersises. It never occured to me to try it, precisely because I thought it to be an SCA construct, an I has said as much on several occasions.
So we set up a milk jug, and he asked me how well wraps cut. I told him I had no clue. My friend, Russ, has been fighting for about 13 years, and he's a really excellent fighter and a joy to watch. He stepped up, threw a perfect wrap, and sliced cleanly (no splash) through the milk jug. I was pleasantly suprised, but as anyone who cuts will tell you, mulk jugs are easy.
Next we buy up a 2 liter soda bottle, which is much more resiliant. You really have to be properly aligned, and generate much more power to get through bottle. if you put in a halfhearted blow, the bottle will just bounce right off the stand.
He cut through the soda bottle; he did knock it over, but he cut clean through it.
So we put up a gatorade bottle.These are made from the same resilient material as a soda bottle, but thicker. These area royal pain (at least for a hack like me). Russ grit his teeth and gave it a good stout throw. It bounced. He tried again, it bounced again. There are limits to everything.
Getting back to the combat validity of the wrap, most wraps (in my limited experience) are thrown to the back of the leg, around the
shield. I'd say against plate, or maile, you'd be wasting your effort. Maile is proof against most cuts, and thought the wrap can be thrown with suprisingly good force, it is not a power shot. At least not based on our completely unscientific test ;) .
Against a gambeson, I wouldn't want to be the guy in the gambeson, but it might stop the blow. Anything less and I think you'd lose your leg.