Posts: 5,981 Location: Birmingham, Alabama
Tue 20 Apr, 2010 11:00 am
I just got mine. Here's a mini-review to help out folks eager to try this product. Bear in mind that I view this as an unfinished "kit" project.
The Good: I'd say it's good overall, and may be the best $159 (shipped, from KOA) I've spent on arms and armour. :D As remarked above, the side profile is nice. The visor profile--which is a part where most manufacturers fail badly--looks good to me. Surprisingly, the front view is more complex than I expected from product photos. Perhaps they've responded to complaints. It's slightly more hourglass shaped. The lines overall are excellent, I think.The sight is neatly done and isn't too large, which is one of the reasons I chose this piece over the Windlass sallet and GDFB "jawbone" sallet. The size is as advertised for a "medium" (~24.5",) which still swallows my wee noggin (~22). BUT although the thin, strange liner makes my head feel like a pea in a can, a properly made and attached liner should be almost perfect. The weight is 8.5 lbs, lighter than advertised (a good thing) but still 14 ga. throughout (another attraction over the 18 ga. Windlass). Another selling point--No lining rivets. That's bad for folks who want something historical-looking off-the-shelf, but great for those of us who don't want the manufacturer standing between us and doing it right. Some other GDFB sallets have riveted liners, and those are non-starters because the rivets are out of place.
The Bad: The liner...oh, my, what a problem! I'm going to be generous and assume that this is a cost-saver. Marking and drilling the bowl for lining rivets, driling, riveting, etc. takes time and eats drill bits. But how do you include a liner without rivets? Glue. How do you provide enough leather surface area to support a glued liner? Extend the liner all the way to the bottom of the bowl. The good news is that this liner lets go with some tugging. I'll be making an entirely new liner and placing the rivets properly. I don't know if I'll go for handmade octagonal rivets this time, though. :D Been there, done that. The straps are junk but he brass buckle is of historical form and should be salvaged to use on the scabbard belt of your 15th c.
German longsword project (if you have one--I do!:) )
The raised-visor image below indicates the max height. The hand holding the visor indicates that it will not stay up on its own. 14 ga. ain't lightweight, and the visor cant get high enough to be past the tipping point. Visor doesn't stay fully closed, either, which is pretty simple to fix, especially if you want to add a late 15th c.-style spring pin.The visor pivots look more like temporary assembly rivets--they're lining rivets, actually, and much too small. Again, better too small than too large. I'll experiment to get a tight fit and improve articulation of the visor. One other visor issue, which I'm not sure is a-historical: The visor covers one of the strap rivets. I'm not sure I've seen that on any historical sallets. If I can't find an historical example of that I might want to make that edge of the visor deeper to expose that rivet. The top edge of the visor could be a bit deeper, too, so I'll look into that as well.
The polish is even but not as high as it would have been historically. On a scale of 1-10 in terms of historical finish, with 10 being an historical mirror polish, I'd say this finish is an 8. Not bad, by any means, and excellent for most purposes. The edges of the visor are cut square and bit rough in places, so I'll be smoothing those and beveling them. The "arms" of the visor are of historical shape, but slightly crude. I'll reshape those a bit.
Verdict: Excellent display piece. Wearable off-the-shelf if your head fits the thin liner, but probably not very comfortable, and not able to pass the 6' visual test due to the lack of lining rivets. Potential to be much more accurate, much more wearable and worth much more than the $146 KOA is charging.
The photos tell the rest. Hopefully, this is enough info to help you decide.
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