Anyway, I eventually ordered one, but was a little concerned that the blade may not be up to much as there has been talk of Windlass blades being thin and whippy. I was expecting to have a blade made up by a UK maker, as a standby. As it happens, when it arrived, it was a perfect candidate for conversion. It was rigid and thick enough, and very well tempered and hardened. A real surprise.
Anyway, I got to work shaping the blade into the characteristic (early) form for this type of sword. Later ones look like a piece of iron rod with a blade on the end, which I didn't like - I prefer the more 'quasi-sword' shaped ones. It was slow going, to keep the metal cool and to cut through that tempered steel! I thought taking off so much steel would make the blade more flexible, but it had no effect and it still only moves a few inches to either side at the tip, which is what you need for a stiff boar sword.
The double ring guard was far too heavy and bulky to be found in the hands of a hunter chasing a boar through the undergrowth, so I took one ring off (and also got rid of the twirly finials to the quillons - this is a plain 'working' tool, after all).
All that remains is to turn the cross-bar that goes through the end of the blade, which will mirror the shape of the quillons (much like the bar in the sword in the attached pic from Blackmore's 'Hunting Weapons').
It is beautifully balanced (POB is just where the ricasso ends, although that will change once the cross-bar is added).
It's not a conversion for the faint-hearted, and took a lot of work, but well worth it when you consider I have been quoted up to $1500 for a custom boar sword not massively dissimilar.
I've been pondering the scabbard and suspension, and considering using a 'Roman Gladius' style vertical hanging baldrick - the logic being that this would simply have been hanging about whilst carried on horseback, then the scabbard hurriedly ditched, the cross-bar added, and the sword carried in the hand to where the dogs would be holding the boar at bay.......
(If I were a piggy and saw this, I would squeal and turn tail as fast as my trotters could take me...........!)





