Could owners of Huanao jian please write a review on their experiences with cutting with this blade and show photos of the current condition their blades are in after they have been cutting with them for some time?
Thanks!
Moderators: Scott M. Rodell, PaulC



bond_fan wrote:... owners of Huanao jian please ... experiences with cutting with this blade and show photos of the current condition their blades ... after ... cutting...




Nik wrote:Glad to see there are also a good couple of scratches and nicks... I thought it was a quality issue that after some time and use there were such scratches also on the sample blades made by my smith.



bond_fan wrote:... a lot of work to ... keep it in art polish...
bond_fan wrote:... miss the bamboo and hit the steel stand?...

Scott M. Rodell wrote:bond_fan wrote:... a lot of work to ... keep it in art polish...
Exactly, a 600 grit polish is goof for a 'working' sword, it looks nice but doesn't show the scratches from everyday use.bond_fan wrote:... miss the bamboo and hit the steel stand?...
No, bamboo is really fibrous, so if during a downward cut one's wrist is too loose, or the angle of the cut is too steep, the blade will be directed straight down along the shaft of the stalk. When this happens the blade usually runs into the pipe the bamboo stalk is inserted into.
The first scratch on a new sword seems like a big deal, but hey, you have to figure you're going o really nick up your blade in the course of learning if you are serious at all. So if you really care how your sword looks, buy two swords, one for the wall & one for the bamboo grove...
Return to Test Cutting for Historical Swordsmanship
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest