How were ax heads attached to their hafts?
I'm looking at various reproduction axes, and wondering if it's more authentic for them to be attached "tomahawk style", with the axe head slipped over the end of the haft and held on by a widened or flared section at the opposite end, or were they slipped over the far end of the haft and held in place by a wedge or wood or metal or both, as we'd see in a modern woodcutting axe? Or more likely still, were both methods used, depending on where and when an axe was made? Keep in mind that i'm talking about fairly short battle-axes here, pollaxes and halberds and their kin are a whole other ballgame. Has anyone seen pictures or seen surviving battleaxes in museums, that can shed some light on this? Thanks.
I've seen both.

Some methods of attaching the head I've seen:

1. Slip eye over handle end of the haft; thicker head end of haft secures head.
2. Slip eye over head end of haft, stick something (wedge, spear point) to secure head.
3. Slip eye over end of haft, stick pin or nail through hole in back or side of eye into haft to secure head.
4. Similar to above, but a closed socket instead of an eye
5. Head butts against haft, nailed or bolted to haft.
6. Tang at back of head fits into socket in haft
7. Tang at back of head goes through hole in haft, end of tang bent over
8. Tang at base of head goes into end of haft.
9. Straps put around haft and riveted to head.
10. Head held to haft by nailed/riveted langets.

This isn't a complete list. I didn't consider metal hafts. A few more different methods were used for stone axes, and bronze age axes. Some of the methods in the list above are used together.

I think 2 is the most common European method (wedges, or equivalent effect from insertion of the tang of a thrusting point).
Saw an interesting variation on 2 in the list above: head over head end of haft, and then a large plate/washer is pinned to the end, this plate/washer being as wide as the head, and usually longer than it is wide. Some are flat, and some are domed. I don't know whether spreading of the haft by the pin securing the plate/washer, or the plate/washer itself is the main thing securing the head (with the other being extra security), or perhaps both are important.

Page 1 of 1

Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You can download files in this forum




All contents © Copyright 2003-2006 myArmoury.com — All rights reserved
Discussion forums powered by phpBB © The phpBB Group
Switch to the Full-featured Version of the forum