However, the rumors are stemming from an incident that occurred at my house, with my sword, during an event I hosted, with the sword's maker present. Since no one has contacted me or the swords maker directly about it, I felt the need to set the record straight.
the rumor:
The rumor going around is that a standard Albion blade and/or NextGen broke in half while cutting a pool noodle, or sustained damage on that level.
the truth:
A modifed Albion sword with an "experimental" blade had an edge chip when it cut into an old length of PVC pipe that was supporting a pool noodle.
the sword
The sword in question was "Problem Child". This sword was a custom hilted La Tene sword that Shane Allee made for me, with a significantly re-ground Albion La Tene blade. As it turns out, this blade was on eof the first blade blanks Albion ran using the new 1075 steel, and using a new heat treating rig. It was one of a batch of "experimental" blades b/c they were still experimenting with the heat treat. This particular blade was quite hard at the edges, very different from the average Albion La Tene blade.
The blank was then reground significantly in profile taper, as can be seen below. Not only that, but the edge geometry was re-ground as well---It had very sharp, thin edge geometry, a veritable razor of a sword. This is historical and appropriate for the sword type we were reproducing. BUT, this did not work well with the "experimental" heat-treat.
The result was that when the blade encountered the old PVC, it resulted in a chip. The chipped blade can be seen below.
resolution:
Albion is not shipping out swords with the "experimental" blades, nor did they ever intend to. In addition, they are supplying Shane with a blank that has the standard heat treat.
my comments
I have cut extensively, on light targets with Albion swords of both First Gen and Next Gen. I cut at Chad's gathering in July, and at my own Round Table in September.
Most of the swords that we cut with cut into the top of the PVC that holds the pool noodles. It simply happens accidentally when many, many cuts are made by unskilled cutters (like me). None of the other swords including a "standard" La Tene, have ever shown this sort of damage from cutting into PVC, pool noodles, bottles, whatever.
I also recently got to see a Jarl take an accidental backswing into a butted maille aventail up at Albion. I did not see any discernable edge damage from that either. Actually, I have enquired to buy that very sword, if that tells you something about my personal confidence level in the integrity of the blades.
From my own cutting experiences I am sure that this sort of damage is not typical, despite what you might hear. Mark Weldon could also tell you how an Albion blade holds up after cutting PVC, since I accidentally took a large section of PVC off the top with his Migration D. (sorry Mark :\ )
I also knew Albion would make good on the fluke that occurred, which is why I didn't feel the need to make a big hoopla.
That is, until I heard the mis-information going around. Hope this clears things up.
Thanks for listening,
Nate B.


This is Problem Child, note the significantly re-ground blade


chipped blade--chip is on the side toward the bottom or downward edge, right at the COP


chipped blade