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Radovan Geist
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Posted: Mon 29 Jul, 2019 12:15 pm Post subject: DIY: Dagger time! |
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I have recently started to work on some daggers. Both are from 14260 spring steel.
The longer one is 60 cm long, 2,5 cm wide and 6 mm thick, thinning to 3mm towards the point. It has a diamond cross-section. with central fuller, pierced with round and oblong holes. The blade has a reinforced point, but I might not keep it - I may grind it off. The blade represents a type of extremely long left-handed daggers from 16th/17th century. Itīs nearly finished, just needs some cleaning of lines before it goes off to hardening & tempering.
The second one still needs some filing and grinding. It will be a "swordbreaker" type, 16th/17th C., 45 cm long and 4 cm wide, 6mm thick, thinning to 3 mm after the "catcher" section.
Some more dagger blades are in the making, I will post pictures.
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Harry Marinakis
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Posted: Tue 30 Jul, 2019 4:20 pm Post subject: |
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I have always been fascinated with the reinforced points.
Looking forward to seeing the finished knives.
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Radovan Geist
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Posted: Sun 12 Jan, 2020 11:42 pm Post subject: |
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Larger daggers are still waiting for their turn, as I was busy turning something else: a hande for a simple late-form of a ballock dagger, inspired by finds from Mary Rose. Here it goes:
All parts ready for assembly: blade from spring steel, hardened and tempered, handle turned on a lathe from applewood, with reinforcing plate from a bronze sheet (already attached by two small nails) and a bronze cape (and a screwdriver, which obviously does not belong to the set, but likes to take pictures so it slipped-in).
First assembly, before the final cleaning. The handle has alredy been varnished with oil mixed with fine ash.
Detail of the cape decoration.
And the result, with a leather scabbard (two-layered) and a terrible light reflection.
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Radovan Geist
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Posted: Thu 27 Feb, 2020 11:51 am Post subject: |
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Some progress on one of the larger daggers.
First rough cut of the crossguard.
A protective shell was cut from a sheet of soft steel, 2mm thick
Shaped
and here is the whole setup (oval pommel turned on lathe), before final filing, polishing etc
and here
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Radovan Geist
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Posted: Mon 09 Mar, 2020 1:29 am Post subject: |
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Here we go: the first long dagger is finished, only the scabbard is missing.
Stats: Total length: 65 cm, blade: 50 cm, weight: 980 g. POB is some 2cm from the crossguard.
The blade is made from a spring-steel, hardened and tampered; crossguard and pommel are from soft construction steel; the shell was dished from a 2mm sheet. The handle is from walnut wood, stained with fine ash mixed in oil.
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Radovan Geist
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Posted: Sat 21 Mar, 2020 6:29 am Post subject: |
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Now, youīve got an old rasp, brass water-cock from a broken garden pipe and a piece of walnut wood. Whatīd you do with that? Add a brass plate and few hours of time (as the quarantine spoiled your weekend plans) - and you have a bollock dagger. Not a perfect one, admittedly, but passable for stage fencing.
Here are the parts: blade from an old rasp that I have found rusting some time ago, a brass water cock and a handle from the walnut wood, turned on a lathe, with lobes shaped with a rasp and a sand-paper.
A first setup just to check everything is in place.
The protective plate was made from a 4mm thick brass plate.
And here is the result, evetyhing set-up, cleaned and polished. In the end I was not able to clean the blade completely as it would stay too thin, so there are still those rusty "dots" visible. Well, itīs far from perfect, as I said.
And a handle detail.
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Radovan Geist
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Posted: Sat 28 Mar, 2020 11:19 am Post subject: |
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The final setup, with scabbard made from two layers of leather.
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Radovan Geist
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Posted: Thu 02 Jul, 2020 8:03 am Post subject: |
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Same problem here with broken links to pictures. Hereīre two of them - long narrow blades, different forms of guards.
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Radovan Geist
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Posted: Thu 02 Jul, 2020 8:09 am Post subject: |
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And two bollock daggers described in earlier posts:
A simple one:
And her flashy sister:
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