yesterday I asked about the czech republic arms+armor and the replys were very informative. One of the issues discussed was sharpening a "beater" sword, which is maid with reenactment in mind and is not intended for sharpening. Here is what
Ciran said about A+A swords:
Quote: |
First off the bat these swords were never, ever designed as sharps. To sharpen it is to ruin it. Im a little weirded out by the fact theiron sold it as a sharp. The edges are flat, 2-3 mms. They are Beater swords, designed for a lot of daily use and never designed to be put on a wall. The fitnish isnt perfect in any way. There are pits in the pommels and guards and the finish is what I would describe as brushed steel rather then satin, but its definatly a working finish. The steel Is Kinda soft. At first this annoyed me but I got used to it and began to appriciate the fact it needs to be a bit softer to survive being bashed up all the time. A solid edge on edge strike would nick the edge but your not supposed to be staticcly blocking anyways (lol yea..not a closed book). I enquired about it at the time and the jist of it all is the hardness suits the intended useage. Which swings me back to the sharpness thing, The sword was never designed as a sharp and the steel is not tempered with edge retention in mind. Methinks again that sharpening the blade was a disservice and frankly I would have thaught nathan knew better. Like you can sharpen a Del tin and people did it before they knew any better but now we know more about edge geometry and we should know better themn blunts should remain blunts and sharps should remain sharp, The right tool for the job. To try to make a tool do something it was never designed to do is always gonna lead to dissapointment. |
Point well taken Ciran.
However, many folks have sharpen their Del Tin's pieces, and I have heard nothing but good things about 5143's cutting performance. I have not heard anything about its finish after sharpening, though. What features of Del Tins allows them to be successfully sharpened and retain good edge? The heat treatment? The blade geometry? Both? Anything else?
I am going here on the assumption that Del Tins perform equally well as compared to accurate historical replicas of similar weight and blade geometry. I know that Del Tin's blades are made to survive reenactment, and their blades are made to be tougher, so the distal tapper and weight distribution on the blade might be sckewed as compared to a historical replica.
My whole point is this: Can we go out and practice with a sharpened Del Tin (wielding the sword solo and cutting practice) and assume that exercissing with a good replica (of the same dimensions) will feel the same?
The reason for starting this thread is that after I get my Albion NG Baron, very high on my priority list is a sharp DT5143, and I want to know what to expect. From thinking this over, it appears that each sword should be treated individually with minimizing generalizations, but I cannot help but ask could 5143 be considered a fair representative of the XIIIa topology?
If not ATrim1415 will be on top of my priorities instead (even though its XIIa). I am sucker for XIIa.
Cheers,
Alexi