Posts: 871 Location: Paris, France
Thu 23 Apr, 2009 2:01 pm
Some new swords !
Hello all!
Jean Thibodeau has recently sent me data about three other swords he owns (thanks again Jean :cool: !), and I finally get around to post about these. They are Albion Gaddhjalt, Tritonia, and Doge. They are quite interesting for me because they challenge some of the patterns I have been seeing and describing in earlier posts.
But first, here are the swords Jean has told me about so far:
[ Linked Image ]
(the measurements for the
Black Prince were actually from David E. Farrell but Jean owns this sword as well)
I have sorted them from top to bottom by the inertia of their 'stick' around the cross. This is apparently a fair measure of how easy the swords are to stop after a cut, a sort of 'blade presence' if you like. It matches what Jean told me except maybe for the Del Tin. He wrote earlier that the DT5146 felt more agile than the Gaddhjalt... So there is still something to sort out there, inertia alone should probably be composed with other indicators to fit the subjective evaluation.
For example, the mass concentration (relative amplitude of the point mass) could enhance the feeling of agility. It's probably what explains that the RavenWolf feels different, it has a relatively high inertia but also a high mass concentration. In a way it could make it feel agile but actually tiring to use...
The three new swords have fairly heavy sticks, which lends a lot of authority to their strikes. I had only sparse data on swords with this property. The Tritonia is the heaviest hitter, or at least the heaviest stick.
The location of the point mass surprised me in the three new swords. It is significantly inside the handle (enough that I don't think a measurement error alone could explain it). It is possible that the actual effect of this variation is barely noticeable in actual use, or that building such swords with a point mass at the cross is not practically possible. I will have to make more experiments with objects differing only by the location of their point mass to get a better idea.
Note that the Black Prince looks very light on the diagram, belying its overall weight completely. Very light stick, very low inertia, high mass concentration... A radically different compromise in mass distribution. Even without considering that it can be used in two hands ;)
Overall these are three very interesting swords because they do not look like any other I had data about previously. They are filling a blank area, so to speak. But there are still plenty of blank areas, as well as certain trends that start to emerge... For example, there is a definite trend that swords with a high stick mass have a proportionally high inertia, and variations around this trend show how swords are shortened to optimize impact, or lengthened to optimize reach. I still feel there are many ways I can inspect the data, trying to correlate with how the sword feel and how I know they can function.
I'm going to steadily keep trying to measure as many swords as I can to fill in the blanks :) But I wish to thank again the community for the measurement effort, which has helped me a bunch. I'm trying to develop web tools that will be specifically made so that anyone can play with the computations without having to wrap their heads around the math. Hopefully this will allow further progress in our knowledge of swords!
Kindest regards,