as a way of introducing myself here, I thought I would share two longswords I'm currently working on. Both are type XVIIIb blades of imposing dimensions, the longer one of the two has an overall length of 57" with its blade measuring 43", the shorter one spans 52" overall. Big swords but not crowbars and well suited to the German school of longsword fencing.
It all starts with paper templates on an 8mm thick piece of 56Si7, next to it an already finished sword of the same type:

Blades are cut out and the pre-HT edge thickness set to 2mm, as with the rest using an angle grinder:


The distal taper is ground in. These blade sport a convex distal taper, starting at 8mm base thickness down to 4mm at the tip. Massive and very stiff blades but with excellent point control and a very precise feel during movement.

Finally the actual blade geometry is shaped:

Now I can put the angle grinder away and after several hours of filing and belt sanding, the blades are ready to be sent to the heat treater.



As you see, I'm keeping a short hexagonal cross section at the base, which is quite typical for these blades (could be a good deal longer as well, on some originals it spans the entire lower third). This has mainly aesthetic value but also adds mass close to the handle and aids in keeping the base stiff.
Now fingers crossed that the blades make it through heat treat straight and in one piece. I'll update here as the swords progress.
Thank you for looking, questions, critic, etc all welcome!