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Sean Flynt
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Posted: Tue 22 Apr, 2008 1:58 pm Post subject: Khyber Knives |
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I know almost nothing about these Afghan knives. I've admired the general form on the rare occasion I've seen them and my interest was stirred while reading Flashman In the Great Game in recent weeks. By coincidence, somebody posted here a link to a new arms auction house that's offering several of these weapons. The more I look at these the more I like them. They remind of the German rugger. Slender lines, compact size, scale grips.... Does anybody know of decent reproductions or at least cheap indecent ones that could be remounted? I found no other significant discussion in these fora. Here are a few 19th c. examples from the auction site mentioned above. They're about 26" overall.
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-Sean
Author of the Little Hammer novel
https://www.amazon.com/Little-Hammer-Sean-Flynt/dp/B08XN7HZ82/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=little+hammer+book&qid=1627482034&sr=8-1
Last edited by Sean Flynt on Tue 22 Apr, 2008 2:10 pm; edited 4 times in total
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Sean Flynt
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Gary A. Chelette
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Dan Dickinson
Industry Professional
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Posted: Tue 22 Apr, 2008 7:43 pm Post subject: |
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Well Hanwei will soon be releasing Tristan's sword from the Movie stardust....which follows along the same general lines (with some yhatagan/fantasy influences thrown in)
Dan
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Terry Crain
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Posted: Tue 22 Apr, 2008 9:14 pm Post subject: |
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Hi Sean,
I also have admired these knives (short swords really) for some time. Over the course of the last year, I have acquired three of these large Kyber Knives. Mine are approximately mid to late 19th century and are wicked sharp and fast. Each is unique.
I have not seen much in the way of reproductions, but like many middle eastern/indo persian/ islamic edged weapons, great buys of originals do appear on e-bay from time to time. Some antiques in poor condition are sold without reserve and may suit your purpose as a project (if you can bring yourself to work on an original, albeit one in poor condition)
Short of that, if I come across any reproduction sources I will post it. I can't believe some Indian maker isn't turning these out.....
Best regards,
Terry
Terry Crain
A/K/A
Donal Grant
Honor, not Honors!
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Kelly Powell
Location: lawrence, kansas Joined: 27 Feb 2008
Posts: 123
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Posted: Tue 22 Apr, 2008 9:36 pm Post subject: |
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Do not these style of knives have a strange "T" shape on the spine of the blade?
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Terry Crain
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Posted: Tue 22 Apr, 2008 9:43 pm Post subject: |
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Not sure what you mean by "strange", but yes, they do have a "T" cross section, with the "T" being at the top the blade opposite the sharped edge. I have heard this referred to as the yelmen (SP?) and is a common feature on these weapons. Strenghtens the blade and looks quite cool in my opinion, but maybe I am the strange one
Terry Crain
A/K/A
Donal Grant
Honor, not Honors!
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Shayan G
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Posted: Wed 23 Apr, 2008 2:14 pm Post subject: |
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Thanks for posting those pictures! I'm drooling already.
If you try the By The Sword one, please share your thoughts on its quality. I'm trying to choose between that and a Qama for my next cheap fun Islamic short sword.
As to yelman, I've only heard that used for the "false edge" on Turkish pala, but I'm not an expert by any means!
You have to be a man, first, before you can be a gentleman!
~the immortal John Wayne
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Nick Hughes
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Posted: Wed 23 Apr, 2008 2:27 pm Post subject: |
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I was told that the T shape to the blade cross section was to stiffen the point of the blade to allow it to pierce chain mail more easily.
Nick
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Korey J. Lavoie
Location: New Hampshire, USA Joined: 06 Apr 2006
Posts: 63
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Posted: Thu 24 Apr, 2008 2:09 pm Post subject: |
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Terry Crain wrote: | Not sure what you mean by "strange", but yes, they do have a "T" cross section, with the "T" being at the top the blade opposite the sharped edge. I have heard this referred to as the yelmen (SP?) and is a common feature on these weapons. Strenghtens the blade and looks quite cool in my opinion, but maybe I am the strange one |
Beautiful knives but I'm turned off by the thought of how that cross-section would affect cutting ability.
From the hundred year war
To the Crimea
With a Lance and a Musket and a Roman Spear
To all of the Men who have stood with no fear
In the Service of the King
-The Clash: The Card Cheat
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Shayan G
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Posted: Thu 24 Apr, 2008 3:24 pm Post subject: |
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Well much of the rest of the blade is thin or moderately thick, the idea being that the spine strengthens it like an I-beam (see Mr. Trim's new sparring design? same idea) while minimizing their thickness at the edge. Thus you get a thin but very tough blade, ideal for chopping through. By the time the T spine passes through, the cut is already wide enough to make its effect negligible, barring bad cutting angle and user error.
You have to be a man, first, before you can be a gentleman!
~the immortal John Wayne
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Korey J. Lavoie
Location: New Hampshire, USA Joined: 06 Apr 2006
Posts: 63
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Posted: Thu 24 Apr, 2008 6:48 pm Post subject: |
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Shayan G wrote: | Well much of the rest of the blade is thin or moderately thick, the idea being that the spine strengthens it like an I-beam (see Mr. Trim's new sparring design? same idea) while minimizing their thickness at the edge. Thus you get a thin but very tough blade, ideal for chopping through. By the time the T spine passes through, the cut is already wide enough to make its effect negligible, barring bad cutting angle and user error. |
I understand how that would make for a very strong blade but it seems to me that it would be a trade-off for a potentially significant reduction in cutting ability on soft-targets. Cutting tests with this type of cross-section might make me reconsider that assumption of course.
From the hundred year war
To the Crimea
With a Lance and a Musket and a Roman Spear
To all of the Men who have stood with no fear
In the Service of the King
-The Clash: The Card Cheat
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Ken Speed
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Posted: Thu 24 Apr, 2008 6:52 pm Post subject: |
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Hi Korey,
You wrote, "Beautiful knives but I'm turned off by the thought of how that cross-section would affect cutting ability."
The T rib doesn't go all the way to the tip of the knife and wouldn't cause a problem either in slashing or stabbing while it would give a thin blade a lot of strength and rigidity. I think these are very well designed weapons.Bear in mind that these knives are from the Khyber Pass area, Afghanistan, and the Afghanis have been killing people ( invaders, each other, Hindus) since the time of Hannibal if not before.
Regards,
Ken
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Kelly Powell
Location: lawrence, kansas Joined: 27 Feb 2008
Posts: 123
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Posted: Fri 25 Apr, 2008 4:51 am Post subject: |
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Terry Crane....I meant "strange" as in a unusual feature that I have never seen before...I couldnt judge if you are strange or not....But I have been called it and some of my best friends are odd little people , so that is not too negative a word in my lexicon!
Theory: would the T-back allow them to block weapons that would normally damage a similar blade of that size/thickness? Not that this was a reason for such construction, but more of a happy accident.
And historically , what is the naitive metallurgy like? Do they have a rep either good or bad? Could the T-back have been a way for them to compensate for bad steel?
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Ken Speed
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Posted: Fri 25 Apr, 2008 7:58 am Post subject: |
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Hi Kelly,
You wrote, ""Do not these style of knives have a strange "T" shape on the spine of the blade?"
I just remembered that I once owned an old sword bayonet that had a blade that was nearly two feet long and it had a T cross section for all but six inches or so of the tip. My guess is that the bayonet was German in the general sense inasmuch as the script and the language of the engraving on the blade seemed Germanic. That T cross section must not be all that strange, I'm sure those bayonets and similar ones must have been made in the hundreds of thousands.
Its a great way to provide rigidity and still keep weight down in a blade.
Regards,
Ken
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Glen A Cleeton
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Posted: Fri 25 Apr, 2008 8:47 am Post subject: |
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The AH prefix offerings linked are Deepeeka products and have a kind of dissapointing look to the blade crossections. I'm afraid that might be the result from any of the producers and exporters from the area. If one is happy with the overall profile, I guess they might suit. The HAnwei prototype seems to at least nod to the crossection. I know my yataghan has a pretty serioushollow to the grind that kind of mimics this to and extent but the cutting edges of these seem even thinner. Hard to tell from the pictures alone i guess.
Cheers
GC
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Terry Crain
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Posted: Fri 25 Apr, 2008 6:39 pm Post subject: |
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I agree with Ken regarding the fact that there really is no issue with the T-back creating a problem with cutting ability or effectiveness as a weapon to be used for its purpose. Many eastern swords and knives have this feature including the Kilij, some Saifs and many Shamshirs.
There are two threads listed in this index right now which have many pictures of middle eastern swords with this feature. The Kilij in particular was known as a very effective weapon utilized by the Ottoman Turks, who knew a thing or two about warfare and the art edged weapon combat.
The Kyber Knife is generally a short sword sized weapon used to stab and hack. Its not a cutting exercise weaponby any means. The blades are very sharp and mine are quite light and lively with most of the weight in sitting in your fist, it has very little blade presence. ... That being said, they are very nasty , and feel quite deadly and as an unarmoured opponent, I certainly would not want to face one!!!
Terry Crain
A/K/A
Donal Grant
Honor, not Honors!
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Dan Dickinson
Industry Professional
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Posted: Sat 26 Apr, 2008 5:32 am Post subject: |
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I agree that the Deepeeka offering probably isn't of the best quality. However, a slightly better photo from their website seems to show that they could possibly feature the T section (or it could just be a fuller I suppose).
Dan
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Anders Backlund
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Posted: Sat 26 Apr, 2008 8:06 am Post subject: |
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Dan Dickinson wrote: | Well Hanwei will soon be releasing Tristan's sword from the Movie stardust....which follows along the same general lines (with some yhatagan/fantasy influences thrown in)
Dan
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I did wonder about that one. I kept wondering if it was an obscure real-life sword that just sort of slipped under my radar of if the propmasters made it up from multiple sources.
There's some clear yathagan inspiration there. Though, is it just me or does it also have a lot of scramaseax and butterfly sword influences?
The sword is an ode to the strife of mankind.
"This doesn't look easy... but I bet it is!"
-Homer Simpson.
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Shayan G
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Posted: Sat 26 Apr, 2008 6:47 pm Post subject: |
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Looks like a khyber knife to me, down to the imitation koftgari on the blade. The only difference would be the tulwar-like handguard.
Very appealing blade all around!
You have to be a man, first, before you can be a gentleman!
~the immortal John Wayne
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