My body has traveled a long way and some of the roads weren't paved

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Practice Sword 101

There's alot of guys out there making training/practice swords and charging a fair amount for them. Rightly so, many of the are very nice items. Seen some junk too.
Jeff Finder makes some beautiful stuff, by hand but the attention to detail and finish is superb. http://www.stickman-escrima.com/Products/Kalis_Seka.htm

Bill Bednarick is another one. Great stuff, a bit more automated (for a reason) and very usable. Great balance, ect. I've got his talibong trainer.

http://www.combativecustoms.com/trainers.htm
Me? I'll make my own thank-you. As Bobbe loves to remind me, Ja I'm Dutch.
I'd absolutely love to get one of Jeff's new ones but the Dutch in me says nah, you can make your own.

I'm in the process of making my own Moro Kris.
Why you might ask? Well, it seems my son Cole and I will once again be making the journey and signing up to compete in the WEKAF US Nationals, February in LA.
Now, I still can't fight competitively due to the continual recovery but I could do Sayaw. Spirit is willing but common sense overrules thank goodness. Just not ready to do that kind of conditioning right now either.
I'll be doing a Moro Kris and Scabbard form. Should be interesting to say the least.

Cole on the other hand hates forms, drilling and anything else repetitious. He just wants to get it on.
When I asked if he wanted to go he said "OK, sure". Not any trepidation or second thoughts. That's my boy.

I thought I'd detail my low tech approach to practice sword making.

First procure the Aluminum. Me, any scrap will do. I can always make another. Hardened aluminum is great if you're not Dutch. I've been working off the same huge slab I procured when they were throwing it away at the factory I worked in years ago.
Design is probably the hardest part. If it doesn't float your boat feel wise, what a waste. I know Bill has modeled his right off some from Buzz's gorgeous collection. Can't go wrong there.
In this case, I had a blade shape I liked and a handle shape I liked so I combined them in a drawing














The top one was a gift from Bobbe. I love the blade but our Moro style has more downward curve to the handle that changes some of the movements. The second one is the Ash practice sword made by Mushtaq. It smarts when you get hit in the temple by the way. And dig the handle wrap.
If I'm not certain how a particular design will feel, I'll often make it our of 3/4" plywood first.
Once you draw it out and trace it to the Aluminum, do a rough cut with the sabre saw and a metal blade. WEAR GLASSES!














After the initial cut, it's much easier to handle for the more detailed cuts. Clamp that sucker to the bench and start cutting. Always cut the inside curves big and unless your certain of your handle, cut that oversize as well. It will take some trial and error removing more and more till you get the feel where you want. Feel is critical before moving on.



Here's the finished blank. I get the final shape through a combination of various hand files and more recently added a cheap belt sander. Boy that saves time. I usually sand out any bad scratches with 220, then 600 grit, finishing with a 3M scratch pad.

After that a nice polish with Mother's Aluminum Mag wheel polish. Best thing I've found for Aluminum. NevRdull is good but Mother's leaves a better coating.







Next find blanks of a prefered wood. I prefer Mahogany. Zebrawood is nice too though.


Mahogany has a nice tight grain yet isn't so hard that it takes forever to work.
Glue the handle blanks on with a two part epoxy and let them sit overnight. Then use the belt sander to match the wood exactly to the metal handle shape profile.

Next start shaping the handle. Best to use a hand file at this point. Easier to take more off than put it back.












Finally finish with the product of your choice. And there's alot of them depending on your preference. Tung Oil on Mahogany has always been good for me. It gives a nice darkness to the wood, brings out any grain and yet still leaves the wood slightly porous so it doesn't become slippery when you sweat.


Of special significance on this particular blade is the kewl guard wrap applied by Mushtaq. After wrapping I applied a light coating of 5min epoxy with a cheap brush, working it in until the epoxy set.

The finished work!!!!!



And a few more of my previous stuff.

3 comments:

Mike 'Bwana' Blackgrave said...

great work bro..i sent an email to mu about obtaining some of your work..help me iout..lol

Stickman said...

Nice collection you're making for yourself! Question - what is the material for that black kris you got from Bobbe? It looks a lot like mine! The advantage I see in my swords is that the plastic I use won't chip or splinter so they can take vigorous sparring without showing damage.
- Jeff

steve-vh said...

Actually, Bobbe caught me in the garage playing with it and gave it to me. I believe one of his students made it for him out of some type of African wood, it is dark with a darker stain. I'll ask him again.
Most of these are for solo training of sayaw. For sparring Mushtaq and I use the Ash ones. They've held up pretty good so far.

Just made a companion all wood one for the gym at work in two nights.