Leather Shield - Stabbing, Slashing, Smashing tests - Part 4

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Tod's Workshop

Tod's Workshop

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 731
@MendocinoMotorenWerk
@MendocinoMotorenWerk Жыл бұрын
Tod's workshop: come for the crafts, stay for the destruction
@knightshousegames
@knightshousegames Жыл бұрын
Tod's Workshop: He's almost as good at unmaking things as he is at making them
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
I have my moments
@QuantumHistorian
@QuantumHistorian Жыл бұрын
@@knightshousegames Better at making them, the shield was still very much extant by the end! I'm actually shocked that it could have so many punctures and slashes through it, but still remain a single object at the end.
@vorrnth8734
@vorrnth8734 Жыл бұрын
Creation and destruction beling together anyway .
@Rall707
@Rall707 Жыл бұрын
I love that Tod casually tells us both imperial and metric measurements smoothly in quick succession like an absolute chad
@Ranstone
@Ranstone Жыл бұрын
Yeah, it's cool he makes his videos accessible to disabled people, as well as people who use Imperial. :)
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
Funny, but surely the other way round?
@thomasfowles7366
@thomasfowles7366 Жыл бұрын
As a Fitter and Turner it makes my teeth ache to hear centimetres, urrgh!!cheers Tom
@JanStals
@JanStals Жыл бұрын
@@thomasfowles7366 As a scientist it makes me die a little inside every time I hear Imperial units.
@TheMrcassina
@TheMrcassina Жыл бұрын
​@@thomasfowles7366it fits better in metrics, how do you measure a millimeter in imperials?
@kevinmorrice
@kevinmorrice Жыл бұрын
its honestly fascinating to see these sort of experiments
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
Thanks and it is fascinating doing them
@kevinmorrice
@kevinmorrice Жыл бұрын
@@tods_workshop im a firm believer that things like this need to be more wide spread, maybe then some historical mysteries wont be mysteries anymore
@dakken74
@dakken74 Жыл бұрын
​@@tods_workshopquestion. What would happen if you made the wood of the shield thinner to help compensate for the weight? Would it still be as effective?
@wierdalien1
@wierdalien1 Жыл бұрын
@@dakken74 great question
@josephvisnovsky1462
@josephvisnovsky1462 Жыл бұрын
I love that you built a Hussite war flail. Small detail: Jan Hus and the Hussites. Hus is pronounced Hoos, like goose! Hussites are hoo-sights. Hus is in fact Czech for goose !
@asmodiusjones9563
@asmodiusjones9563 Жыл бұрын
It seems that the iron and glass treatment doubles the weight (about 5 pounds to about 11 pounds). If weight is the factor we are trying to optimize, you should compare it with a poplar shield with double-thick planks, to see if the iron and glass treatment gives more protection than simply another layer of wood, and separately apply the iron and glass treatment to a much thinner layer of wood to see if you get comparable performance for less weight.
@mawe42
@mawe42 Жыл бұрын
My thoughts too. Double layers of wood with grains in horizontal position. Seems it would be less work compared to the leather/glass/iron.
@corwinhyatt519
@corwinhyatt519 Жыл бұрын
That doubling of the weight isn't even with the full shield covered.
@sanityormadness
@sanityormadness Жыл бұрын
@@corwinhyatt519 It is - it's not the actual weight of the shield as it is, it's the weight *it would be* if it was fully covered.
@markfergerson2145
@markfergerson2145 Жыл бұрын
Indeed. Is there a sweet spot where the extra “armor” over thinner wood offers more protection but at the same weight as a regular shield? If so, is hitting that sweet spot worth the extra labor and materials used? I suspect it isn’t for mass production, otherwise more shields would have been built that way. Still, a knight or someone else with the money to spend might have had it done to gain a small but critical advantage.
@corwinhyatt519
@corwinhyatt519 Жыл бұрын
@@sanityormadness No, it is the weight of the shield as it sits for this test with the three testing sections being of different composition. 1:45 is where he states this. The full shield being set up with the same composition as the red section would be even heavier than the 11.5 lbs stated there.
@janc8797
@janc8797 Жыл бұрын
These real life practical tests really are very interesting. Thank you for showing us how ancient and medieval weapons and armor really worked.
@EriktheRed2023
@EriktheRed2023 Жыл бұрын
This was a bundle of fun to watch! 😆I hope Tod enjoyed himself too.
@marcpeterson1092
@marcpeterson1092 Жыл бұрын
I think that's a fairly safe bet.
@YouTubeIsRunByMarxists
@YouTubeIsRunByMarxists Жыл бұрын
The Old Norse referred to shields as 'the net of spears.' I guess Tod showed us why.
@isaacgraff8288
@isaacgraff8288 Жыл бұрын
watching this, lob enough spears and make them too heavy to wield. Net of Spears makes sense.
@PalleRasmussen
@PalleRasmussen Жыл бұрын
They did? Source?
@lscibor
@lscibor Жыл бұрын
From some reason I thought that mail was called that, since it's kind of a net, after all. But it indeed seems to be about a shield. The source seems to be Snorra Eda and the word is "oddnets" so more literally "point net". One kenning for mail is "gǫtvar geirrotu" seems it means "clothing/garment of spearrain".
@melanoc3tusii205
@melanoc3tusii205 4 ай бұрын
You can also look on the other side of it: modern fencing generally shows a swordsman to have a somewhat marginal advantage over a spearman (each with shields) but that might turn out a lot more significant if the spearhead could get caught up in the opponents shield and leave the spearman open.
@gotbaka3
@gotbaka3 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely love your experiments with stuff like this. Please do more weird weapons too! Your flail testing videos are some of my favorites.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
Got another very weird weapon coming, probably next week
@esoel
@esoel Жыл бұрын
@@tods_workshop can't wait!
@lscibor
@lscibor Жыл бұрын
I think that late Medieval and Renaissance shields were some kind of wood/glue/sinew/other stuff composites for most part. Leather was also sometimes used. In Polish lands at least, pavises and shields were pretty ordinarily made by painters guild (pictores?) not any other one. So applying layers of some sticky stuff that could by applied with a brush was probably integral part of construction. Providing a pavise or a shield was customary payment for joining a painters guild in Kraków, for example. Those guilds were also involving wood carvers, probably to work both on shields as well as preparing planks for actual painting. All the way in 1580 Stanisław Sarnicki mentions hussar's shields: "against lances, they have shields from meaty wood, strenghtened with veins (probably meant sinews, common in 16th century Polish) and glues" Later, Claudio Ragnoli mentions " some hussars only use lance alone, the hatchet and shield from sturdy wood and dried sinew of great beasts, joined with glue. The shield is so strong, it resists every strong blow of the lance. They use those shields so dexterously, that they disregard every enemy, as if they were entirely clad in armor". Medieval Crossbow channel has a recipe for very elaborate composite pavise. kzbin.info/www/bejne/fWO1nWx6gbqZl9E
@random2829
@random2829 Жыл бұрын
Great information! And Kraków is one of my favorite cities! ❤ I would recommend a visit to anyone.
@lotoreo
@lotoreo Жыл бұрын
very interesting! btw, "In Polish lands at least, pavises and shields were pretty ordinarily made by painters guild (pictores?) not any other one." - "Shield" in Dutch is "Schild", and painting is called "Schilderen" and painters are called "schilderaars" - So yeah, I think what you said might have been pretty much standard across the medieval world perhaps
@stanalbatross8615
@stanalbatross8615 Жыл бұрын
Please I want Tod to build and test one
@lscibor
@lscibor Жыл бұрын
@@lotoreo I think that in German sources shield makers are sometimes listed with their own name "schilders" but it seems that in most cases they were grouped with other artists and woodworking trades. Probably they could form their own guilds in heavily specialized, industrialized South German towns, where there were few towns specializing entirely in making mail, for example. But probably not in Poland, or say, Sweden.
@markfergerson2145
@markfergerson2145 Жыл бұрын
This makes a lot of sense as many paintings were done on wood panels, which would need to be prepared specially for painting on, differently from say pieces of cabinetry. Then there’s the carpentry/joinery and carving skills needed to make picture frames, again specialized for that purpose even though the techniques would be similar to those used to make cabinetry or other purely decorative (as opposed to structural) woodwork.
@AveryCloseCall
@AveryCloseCall Жыл бұрын
It's been 22 years of whiners telling me "Your reenactment fighting is bogus because you rely on a magic shield that'd disintegrate within a minute of REAL dueling!" Now, thanks to your wonderful video, I can tell the haters to find something else to whine about. Thank you!
@valannarionii6218
@valannarionii6218 Жыл бұрын
What I find really interesting is how many of the anti-armour weapons get stuck in the shield on the first heavy blow in a way that in combat would probably force one to draw another weapon. Obviously one would probably try to avoid it and not just hammer in a blow like that into the middle of a shield, but it still can happen. The Falchion did seem to have that trouble, which despite it not damaging the shield that much, could have been a desirable trait. I love those videos!
@MrMegaDanila
@MrMegaDanila Жыл бұрын
banger video and Im super happy there is someone with such a methodical yet functional and entertaining approach doing experimental archeology. Keep it up!
@euansmith3699
@euansmith3699 Жыл бұрын
I guess the shield would fare even better if supported by an arm rather than an easel; as the arm could absorb some of the impact by moving. Thanks for another fun and informative video.
@stalkingtiger777
@stalkingtiger777 Жыл бұрын
It's amazing how much punishment that shield can take. I was sure you would shatter it with the axe after a few blows.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
It continually amazes me just how tough they are
@adamsbja
@adamsbja Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the handaxe out of everything surprised me. I think it's because that's the one I'm most familiar with, but the situations I encounter it in are made to work in its favor. If you're chopping firewood or branches you're going with the grain, there's no reinforcement to try and hold the wood together, it's what the tool was made for.
@Dack.howaboutyou
@Dack.howaboutyou Жыл бұрын
it did seem like the axe was going to be the tool that made the shortest work of the shield though!
@Kradlum
@Kradlum Жыл бұрын
Fantastic work! I'm thinking, if I'm planning to be fairly immobile and expecting to take lots of arrow hits, I'll take the leather fronted shield. If I want to be mobile, and not expecting lots of arrow hits, I'll take the regular shield. Also, fantastic work on making the beautiful shields, and showcasing some of the beautiful weapons you make in testing them!
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
Thanks and a pleasure
@andrewreynolds4949
@andrewreynolds4949 Жыл бұрын
I think if you plan to be fairly immobile a tower shield would be a better bet, but a shield like this might have some niche uses
@thistlenstar
@thistlenstar Жыл бұрын
Okay, you got me with the Witcher sword. Spectacular ending, and a lot of fun from beginning to end!
@PetelliusCerialis
@PetelliusCerialis Жыл бұрын
I think one of the most interesting things about this test, is just how durable this shield is against all of these attacks. That is even more impressive when you think during combat, you wouldn't really be seeing these nice clean attacks and cuts, its far more likely they'd be coming in at a weaker force or less than ideal angle. Plus the defender would be likely trying to deflect the attack sideways. Crazy
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
Amazingly so
@Ferretsnarf
@Ferretsnarf Жыл бұрын
Adding on to that, even *if* the attacker managed a blow like one of those in combat, in each case it's completely ineffective at causing a wound in the shield carrier, and in almost every case would result in a disarmed attacker. It's not easy getting any of that out of the shield again. As you said, you would be unlikely to get those angles in combat, so I don't thinkt he disarming would be that likely, but still more likely than somehow wounding the shield carrier *through* the shield.
@AlyxGlide
@AlyxGlide Жыл бұрын
axes look pretty damaging against them!
@melanoc3tusii205
@melanoc3tusii205 4 ай бұрын
What I find most interesting is the stickiness and general potential for friction. Probably made it a lot easier to bind an opponent’s weapons than modern fencing can demonstrate.
@eloquentsarcasm
@eloquentsarcasm Жыл бұрын
Love this stuff Tod, you're doing proper "experimental archaeology" on a personal level from the point of view of the average grunt in the field. A bog standard soldier in whatever era you're talking about, this is the kind of weapons, armor, and equipment they'd be using every day in the field. As a grunt in the US Army back in the 90's, when bored we'd do experiments to see if we could improve what we had been issued, whether it was making MRE's taste like anything OTHER than wet cardboard, or adding a bit of padding to our LBE/plate carriers, to tightening/polishing up the actions on our weapons to make em a tiny bit more accurate and reliable. Soldiers as far back as there have been even semi-organized armies did stuff like this to make their lives a little easier and most importantly SAFER in battle.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
This behaviour seems to go back as far as time - thanks
@disgruntledStarWarsviewer.
@disgruntledStarWarsviewer. Жыл бұрын
Heavy axes are definitely the weapon of choice to produce the most damage. But as you demonstrated, extracting the weapons from the shield is bloody tough 😂 Exposes the attacker to a counter-attack.
@Xenophaige_reads
@Xenophaige_reads Жыл бұрын
Love the ending. Put a massive grin on my face, which I needed. Really enjoyed the experimental section too.
@dogishappy0
@dogishappy0 Жыл бұрын
I love this kind of content. Doesn't matter if it's guns or melee weapons. Just show me what it does to a target!
@euansmith3699
@euansmith3699 Жыл бұрын
Do you watch Kentucky Ballistics? That channel is all about the impact. 😄😄😄👍
@dogishappy0
@dogishappy0 Жыл бұрын
@euansmith3699 I love that channel! Around the time of the 4-Bore I started asking for a Punt Gun video on every episode. The exact video after I purchased one of the energy drinks that sponsored him, he does a video on the Punt Gun. I was so happy, it felt like Christmas came early.
@dogishappy0
@dogishappy0 Жыл бұрын
@euansmith3699 high-speed ballistics is another great channel. The video they did on bullets vs glass was so interesting. Tempered glass breaks so fast!
@euansmith3699
@euansmith3699 Жыл бұрын
@@dogishappy0 Thanks for that recommendation👍👍👍Slo-mo Guys do some great blowing things to bits videos too.
@mnk9073
@mnk9073 Жыл бұрын
On the weight issue: I suspect people had different shields for different situations, you'd bring your lighter shield on the march where the chances of arrows and combat are slim but never zero, choose the "regular" one for a battle but you'd get out the big heavy boy if you know you'll storm a castle during a siege because there will be projectiles by the ton and lots of very unfriedly defenders up on the ramparts. We know of siege armour, only makes sense that the idea extended to the shield as well.
@calebbaird4379
@calebbaird4379 Жыл бұрын
By far the greatest channel on KZbin. Your genuine love for your craft and historical armory is so wholesome and happy. Thank you Tod for letting us join you in your fun!
@texasbeast239
@texasbeast239 Жыл бұрын
My understanding is that Viking shields kept the wood panels quite thin, then overplayed the leather. That might keep the weight down and allow the hide (and/or glass and iron filings) to become more beneficial. But with this thick chunk of poplar, the laminants don't matter much in comparison.
@Soren015
@Soren015 Жыл бұрын
The archeological ones found have sometimes got thin calfskin/leather or sheepskin coverings, and sometimes nothing but paint, so depending on what you mean by "overplayed" I don't think you're quite right. Leather is very heavy; even adding 2-3 Oz-thickness leather (meaning 1 mm of leather fronting) to a 90cm shield is gonna up the weight by a pound or so.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
Thanks Soren, I thoughts they were always covered - is that not so?
@Soren015
@Soren015 Жыл бұрын
So - not a scholar in any way, but - from what I understand the biggest find so far is 30-something shields from a single norwegian ship-grave at Gokstad, and all of those had paint-residue straight on the wood, which presumably means no covering. But maybe they were just slapped together and painted for the funeral, and not meant for combat? Hard to say. The one found at Trelleborg has apparently been a covered shield, back in the day, according to the Danish National Museum website. I think there's been some living archaeology-historians in Denmark in recent years, who have definitely popularized the idea that they must've been all covered, because it does tremendously help with their (somewhat flimsy) construction. But then again - the sagas are full of stories of shield being split and sundered, so maybe flimsy shields were just how things were done.
@knightshousegames
@knightshousegames Жыл бұрын
I think if you wanted to revisit this, the next thing to look into would be shield bosses. As noted by Matt Easton in a relatively recent video, they seemed to make a comeback in that 14-15th century. He theorizes that some Heater Shields became boss held due to armor, but my theory after seeing this series is they are a deflecting surface placed on top of where the arm goes, to protect the arm from missiles piercing it like we saw in Part 3 of this series That might be worth investigating. seeing if arrows deflect off of a shield boss, and if so, how much energy they have when they hit the shield. Additionally, I think you should look into just putting a strip of that leather facing just across the middle where the arm goes, and face the rest with canvas, with a boss, and see what the weight is compared to the canvas only shield, to see if it is still usable.
@andrewreynolds4949
@andrewreynolds4949 Жыл бұрын
This is a really interesting idea. I don’t think the iron-glass mixture is worth adding but even just getting a calculation for how heavy the smaller treated leather strip would add could be very interesting.
@knightshousegames
@knightshousegames Жыл бұрын
@@andrewreynolds4949 If it's the difference between an arrow maybe putting a hole in your doublet vs an arrow an inch deep into your forearm, that feels worth it to me. My theory is if you just protect the section where your arm is, and leave the rest untreated, anything bouncing off the boss might not even have the energy to penetrate the rawhide and might even just glance off completely, while balancing the weight nicely, since the heaviest part will be attached to you, so the felt weight isn't as bad
@andrewreynolds4949
@andrewreynolds4949 Жыл бұрын
@@knightshousegames I'm agreeing with you. It's possibly worth it to protect the arm area with the leather layers, but I doubt the iron-glass mixture does much to be worth the extra effort, just going by the arrow test from earlier. It seems to me the leather is what is making the difference
@Dack.howaboutyou
@Dack.howaboutyou Жыл бұрын
i was going to say basically the same thing as knightshouse; it would be interesting to see how the weight-to-protection-ratio worked out if you just used the iron+glass treatment in the area where your hand/arm/body would be [behind the shield]. _So putting the iron+glass mix on the leather in something like a square bit in the middle of that heater, which covered approx half the center area of the shield maybe... with the rest of the shield just being wood covered with the standard 1-2 leather-layers or whatever made the best compromise for protection & mobility (and kept arrows from going so deep they were able to also go through your body armor after the shield perhaps). RE: andrewR from this video and the brief testing we see here it might seem like that added effort of adding the metal+glass-mix was not worth the time nor extra weight added, but i'd personally want to test the whole idea a lot more. Using different shield types, perhaps combining a small metal boss with partial metal+glass-mix application in key areas etc. A shield rarely sits still to be struck flat-on at a right-angle (90 degrees ish etc), and it mainly just needs to keep you from getting hit by a few arrows until you can close distance enough that your proximity to the enemy should discourage enemy ranged-weapon-fire for fear of hitting friendlies. In such a case you might carry a 2nd shield or be mostly concerned with how the shield performs in melee, which seemed like the place that the added durability would be most important. _ _The main problem i'm seeing is not the weight... it's actually what happens if the enemy can use the fact their weapon is stuck in your shield against you to pull your shield out of alignment or physically move you around in such a manner that you are easily dispatched as a result... so maybe trying a different wood and/or glue might make weapons stick in the shield a bit less? -just my first thoughts & 2c
@andrewreynolds4949
@andrewreynolds4949 Жыл бұрын
@@Dack.howaboutyou I think there will be an issue with weapons/arrows stuck in the spear regardless of the extra layers of protection. I'm still not convinced the iron/glass mixture is worth the extra work, or that it provides much additional protection, particularly based on the arrow penetration tests in the part 3 video, but the treated leather definitely seems to have a significant effect.
@heykak
@heykak Жыл бұрын
Tod going full "torturerer laying out their tools" on the shield...
@steemlenn8797
@steemlenn8797 Жыл бұрын
Shield: I won't say anything, not even ouch!
@mysss29
@mysss29 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating that this composite armor uses glass beads, exactly like the early ceramic armor of the T-64 (?). I wonder how much it helps over just leather. Surely it would tend to dull the edge coming through and that'd slow it down a lot...but you've demonstrated really well that it's hard to say. Maybe just gluing it to the outside would be lighter? Anyway, thank you so much for letting us see this kind of thing, it's amazing!
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
A pleasure and it is interesting how thought streams seem to go over huge lengths of time n- one of the reasons I love history
@matthewmccalister5594
@matthewmccalister5594 Жыл бұрын
I love this channel. One of the few that I get genuinely excited to learn on through these experiments. I LOVED castled as a kid and always imagined knights to be undefeatable. It's so cool to think about how they would have to decide between heavy duty and more weight or lighter, more agile... What do you think about using the leather backing on the shield just around the area your arm sits? That would seem to make the most sense for weight vs protection, as the only part that would be affected by most of those weapons that you just tested would be your arm on the back (since most of them went less than 25mm deep) I would love to see a shield build with that section extra protected and the rest just poplar! Or even a modular shield with the middle section permanent/ heavy duty and the top and bottom just replaceable pieces of poplar! Might be going too deep there, but I think the idea of just the arm being protected with the halftanned leather would be excellent blend of strength and weight!
@KnightsWithoutATable
@KnightsWithoutATable Жыл бұрын
Some times you just have to hit things to see how durable they are. Experimental archeology like this is essential to understanding the past. It is also a load of fun.
@steemlenn8797
@steemlenn8797 Жыл бұрын
What are you doing as a job? Archeologist. That's boring! You have no idea HOW boring it is. Sometimes it's literally boring holes in composite materials!
@99Plastics
@99Plastics Жыл бұрын
This was too much fun too watch, honestly need more of these crazy destruction Tod videos.
@michaelsommer5255
@michaelsommer5255 Жыл бұрын
I was thrilled about this series of videos about this project. The results are very interesting from a historical point of view and also for creating armour in general. The shield became tougher and would take a lot of more brute force until it breaks. The glued on leather helped the wood fibres to stay together. The project gave me inspiration and ideas for a body armour project. The lessons learned in that videos were quite usefull.
@theflyeragaric
@theflyeragaric 11 ай бұрын
Great work, really thought provoking, though in this case I believe given the choice most combatants would pick the glass and iron file, for the reason you've chosen not to as it's weight doesn't only offer more protection but also adds weight to your push and functions far more efficiently as an offensive weapon. Thanks for the videos Tod!
@DSlyde
@DSlyde Жыл бұрын
I would like to see if it significantly improved the lifespan of the shield on repeated edge strikes. Also, i do like the concept of putting the leather jusg over the section your arm is behind because it needs less penetration to harm you in that spot only.
@trailcutter3087
@trailcutter3087 Жыл бұрын
Im not going to be the first to say this im sure, but I think that if weight is the main thing after adding the leather, glue, glass and iron shavings to the shield then maybe just the half tan leather with glue might be the best of the two. but im not someone that makes those things so i have no idea but i do have to say that it would be fun to see a shield with a layer of leather on the face of it then a layer on the back of it were the padding and arm strap is. maybe a thick piece on the face of the shield glued and nailed then a thinner one on the back glued and nailed, could mix it up i guess but i feel that would make for a good shield. might weigh more but hopefully not to much more. Now for what i do have to say is thank you for making this wonderful video Tod, I look forward to many more.
@fragiedk
@fragiedk Жыл бұрын
Even if the shield is very tough without the leather, I would definitely want the leather covering the part where my arm is on the back, to prevent penetration into the arm. And then maybe save the weight on the rest of the shield.
@Dawerl
@Dawerl Жыл бұрын
Exactly what I was about to suggest. Have it "impenetrable" on that middle section with the grip/armrest, and lighter, but "protective enough" on the rest of the shield. That could maybe cut down the weight down a kilo.
@kendallkruse355
@kendallkruse355 Жыл бұрын
Todd may not be a professional athlete but he has the coolest way of getting in a workout!
@axesofebil
@axesofebil Жыл бұрын
I'd love to see a sparth or a gallowglass axe take a chop at it. That extra leverage and narrow head should get in deeper than your felling axe. Great work as always Tod!
@LukaSimek-vs5ze
@LukaSimek-vs5ze 7 ай бұрын
I never leave comments but I really enjoy your videos! Wanted to point out that the ending had me burst to laughter!
@neruneri
@neruneri Жыл бұрын
It really goes to show how far you can get with very little in terms of a defensive object like a shield being useful. It doesn't have to be an indestructible object. It just needs to be good enough, and you're already there.
@jesseshort8
@jesseshort8 Жыл бұрын
I've been waiting for the conclusion of this.
@fredygump5578
@fredygump5578 Жыл бұрын
Interesting test. I think it mostly demonstrates why they would not attack the shield. If you have a weapon with a pointy side and a blunt side, you use the blunt side against the shield so it can't get stuck. And then use the pointy end when you can get past the shield. Because getting your primary weapon stuck in someone else's shield is probably worse than holding a shield with a weapon stuck in it.
@andrewreynolds4949
@andrewreynolds4949 Жыл бұрын
Or, a pollaxe could be an excellent weapon against such a shield. The bottom end is useful for knocking the shield about, the hammer or axe good for smashing it
@grantmaxfield7468
@grantmaxfield7468 Жыл бұрын
Tod - suggestion for another test: a double thickness poplar shield vs. the "impenetrable shield" with leather and, glass and iron bits. The tested shield is slightly more than double the weight of the regular poplar shield. The added layers of leather and glass + iron did make the shield stronger. But for about the same extra weight, how would a poplar shield made twice as thick compare? Presumably armorers experimented with shields of all different thicknesses and if you wanted more protection than the standard poplar shield, you could simply add layer(s) of wood and dial in the trade off between weight and protection more easily than by adding the leather and extra glass and iron. Further from the arrow test, it looks like the added leather and filings helped, but were far from 2x as strong as the standard shield. So, a double thick poplar shield would likely actually be 2x as strong and a better choice. Thanks so much for making these videos. Love your content and have bought a dagger from your shop.
@azathoth3700
@azathoth3700 Жыл бұрын
So good to see these practical tests. Obviously we know that shields were used historically, we have loads of paintings and tapestries and written accounts along with whatever surviving relics exist. But it's really fascinating to see just HOW useful they were!
@steemlenn8797
@steemlenn8797 Жыл бұрын
yeah, I would have expected that relativly thin wood shield to stop even a spear that good at a frontal assault.
@Lokarsh21
@Lokarsh21 Жыл бұрын
I believe it would make a significant difference to start the whole project with the idea of placing leather, glass and iron filings on it rather than fabric and gesso... I doubt the gesso and fabric weigh a ton, but maybe this other construction makes them somewhat superfluous and it shaves off a little extra load. Still, if I am to identify with someone potentially facing arrows, seeing these and previous results, I'm getting to train for the extra weight. Let's not forget, this style of shield is strapped around the neck, it won't just be carried by the arm all the time and if they are this effective it's not detrimental that they stick against your shoulder either: at most, you get scratched or bruised through the armour or padding. Such an amazing project, still! It is genuinely inspiring to see the vivid curiousity that spurs you to try these things, I honestly wish all research and modern academia took a page from your book. We'd make giant leaps in understanding how their technology actually worked. Thank you so much for your efforts!
@larshohmuth4035
@larshohmuth4035 Жыл бұрын
Really intriguing. But I wonder how resilient an 11.5 pound wood shield would be? It would be twice as thick as the original 5+ pound shield.
@2bingtim
@2bingtim Жыл бұрын
Not quite. The 5lb shield is just leather covered poplar. The 11.5lb shield has an added layer of ground glass & iron filings in glue, so that accounts for the extra weight, not thicker wood. That is why you have the 3 different coloured zones on Tod's test shield, with each differently covered over the same thickness wood. Would it really be too heavy as Tod said? Well if you constantly trained with it you'd get quite used to it, considering that Roman Scutum & Greek Hoplite shields were even heavier.
@incredibleburns
@incredibleburns Жыл бұрын
Hi Tod, really enjoying your videos! I just wanted to suggest that you start adding name/info titles in the lower third of your videos when people start talking. For example, in your armour test series I had to go online to find the names and websites/channels of your guests. I think your audience, your guests, and yourself would benefit from this addition. It would help with exposure to your site and generate interest in your guests content also. I just noticed this last night and wanted to help. Thanks mate!
@_aullik
@_aullik Жыл бұрын
Can you try the rondel and the spear on the orange part? I wonder if 1 layer is already enough or if the filings and glass really make such a difference. I believe an extra layer might make sense over the area where your arm goes and maybe around the edge, but not everywhere. I agree with you that shields themselves are already pretty strong.
@commie4164
@commie4164 Жыл бұрын
you could achieve something similar by just adding more padding or even a bit of metal behind the shield. but it would take significantly less time and effort
@gedmerrilin9010
@gedmerrilin9010 Жыл бұрын
Its so impressive how well they survive, it has so many holes in it, its been beat to shit, but its still functional until a spear gets stuck in it. I'd be really curious to see how you make these shields and what steps (removing the canvas, leather, etc) matter in this indestructibility.
@andrewreynolds4949
@andrewreynolds4949 Жыл бұрын
See the earlier videos in this series, particularly “Making leather armor impenetrable part 1” And “Making leather armor part 2”. To summarize, the yellow section is a normal wooden shield. The orange and red areas have a layer of leather boiled with a glue mixture which makes it stiff and very hard. Only under the red section leather he added a mixture of iron filings and glass, as per an old recipe he found.
@dmr6640
@dmr6640 Жыл бұрын
Keep pounding Todd. Love your creativity in offense/defense
@ryanjmay
@ryanjmay Жыл бұрын
Shields are good, shields stop wham bams very well! Fantastic video, going to check out the previous film now! Thanks Tod.
@northwind7409
@northwind7409 Жыл бұрын
Keep in mind that, in actual battle, the various weapons won't likely penetrate as far as you had them go. (I know, you're not as massive as a typical Roman warrior.) You have the shield mounted on a fairly substantial backing. The same shield on someone's arm, even an impressive arm, would have a lot more give than when supported on all sides. Makes the simple poplar shield all the more impressive.
@23Scadu
@23Scadu Жыл бұрын
I assume that was a silver sword, because the shield is a monster.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
Nice! But actually it was a season two 'brooch' sword
@simonnance
@simonnance Жыл бұрын
@@tods_workshop which was a beautiful touch and seemed to "fit" with the blade while never being shoved in the viewers face as a "look we did this!!!". Shoved in plenty of monsters faces though.
@dd11111
@dd11111 Жыл бұрын
Awsomely informative video with an entertaining ending. Great work as usual Tod!
@comfusedWorldpassanger3399
@comfusedWorldpassanger3399 Жыл бұрын
Thanks, Tod, for all the fine entertainment you're showing. Keep em` coming.
@steemlenn8797
@steemlenn8797 Жыл бұрын
That is impresive work, shield! There is a higher chance for the attacker to become disarmed than doing any real damage. Might explain why those shields are strapped and not held. 🤔 If you only hold it, the guy with the weapon might have more force and tear the shield away from you, but if it's strapped, you can disarm him.
@WargamingHistory
@WargamingHistory Жыл бұрын
Wow a very light shield the poplar wood. The composite is much improved and done weapons seemed to bounce more on the upper part.
@klobber17
@klobber17 Жыл бұрын
What the hell why didn't YT give me this notification, now Ive missed out on another of your awesome videos for 24 minutes!
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
But I have rewarded you with a personal 'hello'
@lennic
@lennic Жыл бұрын
Amazingly resilient, didn’t expect it to do so well vs axes
@vlad3967
@vlad3967 Жыл бұрын
Very good points on the weight, but - as you yourself mentioned, you aren't a skilled warrior nor a man of brutish strength. Maybe the iron/glass mix just helps enough against the hardest blows? Get Matt to hit it with a poleaxe. Get Jason to hit it off horseback. Get Joerg to just bash it to bits. More tests are always welcome. Stellar job so far Tod!
@issintf925
@issintf925 Жыл бұрын
I agree, shields are good!
@jimbenge9649
@jimbenge9649 Жыл бұрын
I suppose it's worth remembering that nobody was trying to hit a shield. They were trying to avoid it and hit the man. So however effective a weapon was against a shield, it was really only useful (as you've shown) if it removed the shield from use. JAT. 👍
@rianfelis3156
@rianfelis3156 Жыл бұрын
And of course, you don't need to do it for long. If you just hook the end of your axe behind a shield, you can open it up pretty fast to let someone else use a spear.
@MrBottlecapBill
@MrBottlecapBill Жыл бұрын
@@rianfelis3156 I suspect this type of strategy was what made some battle lines far more successful than others. Working in teams to create that hole in the enemy line. Fighting man to man........your odds are even. I remember hearing somewhere that Roman troops were trained to kill the man in front of the man beside them, not the man in front of them. So as to exploit the gaps in enemy shields(and attention) during the pushing battles when two lines collide. I don't know if that's true but it certainly makes some sort of sense.
@thcdreams654
@thcdreams654 Жыл бұрын
Awesome work Tod. Always a fun watch and a good time. Thanks.
@RallycrossGT
@RallycrossGT Жыл бұрын
finally a video where Tod gets to hit the target every single time!!!! :D
@Andreas-ov2fv
@Andreas-ov2fv Жыл бұрын
It'd be great to see a halberd or poleaxe, both the axehead and the pick. I can imagine that the pick, with the additional leverage of a two-handed swing, would penetrate nicely. It'd also be neat to see if a _manageable_ flail can really hook far enough over the rim to hurt the hand!
@snafu2350
@snafu2350 Жыл бұрын
With either shield's construction (poplar) I'd imagine it'd be more of a hindrance to the attacker than a help: with one mighty swing they've effectively deprived themselves of (prolly) their main weapon due to it hanging up.. & thus putting themselves at a severe disadvantage to boot, even momentarily - not something one should be attempting to do in battle! :)
@Andreas-ov2fv
@Andreas-ov2fv Жыл бұрын
@@snafu2350 Yes, probably. But they would have a 6 foot lever attached to something that's strapped to the other guy's arm. (Don't do it against a boss shield tho) The other guy does have his main hand free to either retaliate or slash off the straps, but leather isn't easy to cut. I imagine I'd briefly try to use it to break his arm or trip him to the ground, but if not immediately successful I would have to scramble for my sidearm.
@svenbeowulfsson641
@svenbeowulfsson641 Жыл бұрын
One could reinforce the area of the holder, where the arm carries the shield, it with the double leather and the powder layer. That would probably raise the weight of the shield to a little over three kilos, but not reach 5.2 kilos. A compromise? The arm would be relatively well protected and the penetrating arrowheads elsewhere would not be long enough to attack the body.
@DemianX6x6x6X
@DemianX6x6x6X Жыл бұрын
Axe goes chopchop! Shields really are amazing
@thehauntedmist9004
@thehauntedmist9004 Жыл бұрын
Hello Tod, I recently got the Bruegel Messer from your store. I absolutely love it. Cheers.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
Thanks and glad you like it!
@AdamCeladin
@AdamCeladin Жыл бұрын
Thats Aweesome Tod! Would love to test one against Throwing Weapons :D
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
Thanks Adam and good to see you here. Unless the thrown weapons had significant mass I doubt they would do much
@AdamCeladin
@AdamCeladin Жыл бұрын
@@tods_workshop Well i think full spin with a war hammer would do something :P and maybe some spear throw ? Cheers Tod awesome test
@CowCommando
@CowCommando Жыл бұрын
I love seeing all the comments talking about just reinforcing the arm section. It makes me wonder if this isn't why shields with a metal center boss were invented. Increased speed and maneuverability of shield and maximum hand protection while minimizing added weight for said protection.
@lscibor
@lscibor Жыл бұрын
Center gripped shields were likely first to be invented, and they were predominantly used throughout most of the history (before widespread use of metal bosses, there were wooden bosses reinforced with various ways). Shields strapped to the arm were "invented" for most part, in Europe they seem to become popular around 11th, 12th century. Both types offer some advantages, but center gripped ones were generally way more popular.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
As another commenter said, when you are wearing vambraces extra protection over the arm is not required
@PJDAltamirus0425
@PJDAltamirus0425 Жыл бұрын
The sticking think can also be a plus, if you using something at a melee and is gets stuck in a cut or a stab, the stabber or cutter is effectively disarmed. Highlanders used studded wooden shields for this reason. Pikes and bayonet points would stick to them. Binding has it's positives.
@johnwright6706
@johnwright6706 Жыл бұрын
I've enjoyed watching this shield series.
@yt.602
@yt.602 Жыл бұрын
If nothing else it shows how really tough poplar is when it's a light weight. The way the wood behaves shows why it was favoured for shields. Battering 7 shades out of it with an entire armoury shows how worthwhile it was to lug a shield about. More than doubling the weight for the extra protection is very debatable as you demonstrated.
@calebmccoy9685
@calebmccoy9685 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating results, I do wonder about the utility of adding the iron filings and glass only to the portions where your arm is expected to be. Penetrating an inch or in the most extreme cases 2 out the back of the yellow portion wouldn't matter except where your arm is strapped in. In that specific region this could provide a lot of effective protection without making the whole shield a boat anchor.
@elio7610
@elio7610 Жыл бұрын
Did the iron and glass fillings even improve the shield at all? Seems like the main difference was the leather, the fillings seemed almost pointless.
@kikiwako
@kikiwako Жыл бұрын
I wonder if that covering might be a lot more useful if the maker does not have access to the right type of woods (in your case poplar). If you only had access to lighter/softer types of woods, adding a covering like such would allow you to reach a structural strength closer or equivalent to a harder/stronger wood shield.
@jamess2873
@jamess2873 Жыл бұрын
Man that just looked like all the fun. I can't believe how resistant a simple canvas covered poplar shield is. I would have thought it would have fallen apart under all that. Perhaps a 'stronger' wood like oak would have cracked up, like when over hardened or under tempered steel is too hard and brittle.
@kdoubleg
@kdoubleg Жыл бұрын
I really want to order one of your rondel daggers. Your video showing how you made one inspired me to make one, and it ended up being my favorite piece iv made. I learned alot making it, and managed to sell it for more than any iv made.
@LuxisAlukard
@LuxisAlukard Жыл бұрын
It's always a pleasure to watch people hitting stuff with great reproduction weapons =)
@jamesault7832
@jamesault7832 Жыл бұрын
Great film Tod.! that for this demonstration mate!
@markwoodford1733
@markwoodford1733 Жыл бұрын
Offered all round pretty good defensive protection I'd say and would give a hefty shove too yeh cheers for the illustration.
@TheFlyguywill
@TheFlyguywill Жыл бұрын
Could you imagine the impact reverberating through your arm from those hammer blows?? Yikes. Even though it didn’t go through super far, I think I would REALLY feel that in my arm and shoulder. Again, you’ve outdone yourself, Tod!
@MrBottlecapBill
@MrBottlecapBill Жыл бұрын
That's what the padded backing is for. :) They felt it too!
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
Thanks
@jt5765
@jt5765 Жыл бұрын
Remember the test was fully supported across the back of the shield. Being held by a soldier it would have a lot more give & flex when struck near the top or bottom.
@spikemcnock8310
@spikemcnock8310 Жыл бұрын
Top marks Tod yet again, really enjoyed watching that,very informative too.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
Thanks
@ABaumstumpf
@ABaumstumpf Жыл бұрын
I think this would warrant a Part 5: Iron filings and Glass shards can come in a large variety of forms and slightly bigger pieces could act like sharp force-concentration and spreading points (concentrating the force on the blade-edge while spreading it on the shield). And due to the materials they might very well blunt the edge of a weapon faster than if it was just leather. So slightly larger junks, maybe a bit thinner leather, and using the same edged weapon several times. ... And i think nobody would object to more videos of you making and testing shields.
@TokyoCraftsman
@TokyoCraftsman Жыл бұрын
Imagine you are a standard soldier in an army, most of the time you spend digging ditches, marching around and standing guard duty, at those time would you carry your full battle rattle? Compare that to getting ready for a full on battle, on a day when you know you are going to meet the enemy and fight. Could the regular poplar shield be for regular normal days, but the leather covered shield be for full on battle days? If you are encamped in a village for a town would you wear your full on battle rattle to a regular guard shift at the gates...? Just thinking like the lazy human I am. Cheers, love the videos!
@paavohirn3728
@paavohirn3728 Жыл бұрын
Fantastically fun watch! Informative as well of course. I didn't catch the thickness of the shields. If I recall, the "viking" shields some people have been showing with the hide/leather cover were quite thin especially at the edges to reduce weight.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
This was 15mm boards as was the old one; heaters could be as low as 10mm. Viking shields seem to be around 10mm at the centre boss and 5mm at the edge
@paavohirn3728
@paavohirn3728 Жыл бұрын
@@tods_workshop Interesting! Thank you for the info and the fascinating experiment!
@jamesbedwell8793
@jamesbedwell8793 Жыл бұрын
It's worth bearing in min actually that this is pretty much the perfect setting to see penetration of the shield, i.e. when it is held in place against a solid backing. If there was any kind of give, say the natural movement of an arm, you'd expect to see much less penetration even with the spears and arrows that were succeeding. Of course also some degree of active use of the shield against an edged weapon to intercept blows early would significantly reduce their effectiveness. A regular poplar shield could, in the right hands, be damn near impenetrable.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
So it seems - agreed on all points
@peregrinemiles7936
@peregrinemiles7936 Жыл бұрын
I know it’s not a direct analogy, as we were overbuilding things to reduce injury, but in the 70s and 80s SCA shields hung on the arm like that were up to 16lbs, and not particularly encumbering. Again, realizing that the sca is not necessarily historical, (or battleground focused) but in general, we found that among those who intentionally trained to use the shield offensively - the person with heavier shield could leverage more control in a fight.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
But this is based on the build of original 14thC shields
@peregrinemiles7936
@peregrinemiles7936 Жыл бұрын
Oh absolutely, I am in no way implying that the people in the middle ages did it the same way or even had the same theories about shield usage. Just saying that (admittedly, from a small sample size) the weight might not have been a particularly limiting concern, vs the cost for example.
@rileyernst9086
@rileyernst9086 Жыл бұрын
That is a glorious array of weaponry Tod.
@QuantumHistorian
@QuantumHistorian Жыл бұрын
Shields: do they work? Yes. Yes, they do.
@sharkforce8147
@sharkforce8147 Жыл бұрын
For the added weight, you could instead have a lot more wood instead. Either a shield with a lot more coverage (to prevent you from taking an arrow to the knee and needing to retire as an adventurer), or a shield that is thicker (and maybe has the grain going the opposite direction). And even at more than double the weight, the coating isn't even covering the entire shield...
@HRM.H
@HRM.H Жыл бұрын
Quality content as always !!
@BobT36
@BobT36 Жыл бұрын
That shield took so many blows and was still in good working order. You can see why they opted for those special arrows and darts (pilum etc.) to render them unusable, rather than penetrate / destroy them. I love the heater shield shape / size too, perfect balance between protection and manoeuvrability.
@2bingtim
@2bingtim Жыл бұрын
Thanks Tod, that was brilliant! Bit disappointed at the end as I would really have loved to see the effect of the sword strike, but laughed. I know that Poplar, Alder & Lime wood were usually chosen for shields for being both light & not splitting too easily along the grain. Then I remembered that Elm has a weird tangled grain, so wondered if that was ever used for shields? I suppose it would be heavier plus maybe harder to split into thin planks. Had all the weapons been well sharpened beforehand?
@andyking957
@andyking957 Жыл бұрын
just came about heraring the Odyssey as recording. At some point it was explicitely statet, some attacked warrior held his shield widely away from his body in anticipation of a spear to be thrown at him... So he know it would penetrate even >2 centuries ago. Also, if you hit a shield not firmly pressed against a wall, it will give way and at some significant energy will go into bending your arm - lost for penetrating the shield. So i suggest a shield suspended at springs to simulate that instead fixing it to a fix wall. You can stop any arrow with a simple silk fabric sheet when it can give way and "anihilate" energy for a good distance... So the yielding might have significant effect.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
The movement certainly would have a massive effect, but I was trying to favour the weapons here and put the shield in the worst possible situation
@EriktheRed2023
@EriktheRed2023 Жыл бұрын
Coming up to 9 minutes, and the shield is still fully functional. Not bad, that! Edit: Of course, Tod makes the same point a few minutes later.
@justlost2010
@justlost2010 Жыл бұрын
Would you please mount the sheld on a realistic arm that would move when hit? Would the movement absorb an impact, depleting penetration? Thomas M. Tucson, Arizona
@ForestRaptor
@ForestRaptor Жыл бұрын
Very nice point. But this experiment itself gives us a great point of reference!
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
Yes it would reduce penetration, but then any information would be based on how good or bad my 'arm facsimile' was, in this case the shield is in the worst possible position, so if it resists here, it will resist all
@justlost2010
@justlost2010 Жыл бұрын
@@tods_workshop I agree with your idea. Just thought you might experiment with ball and socket mounted to the shield to change angles. With a spring to allow for some give and movement. Keep up the good work. Enjoy your content
@entropy11
@entropy11 Жыл бұрын
the fairly rigid mounting of the shield to the target gives you a 'worst case' scenario for shield penetration. One held/worn will inevitably fare better as the user is absorbing some of the impact. The rigid structure of the target means all the force is going into the shield with little chance of glancing. Still useful to test this way, so long as you account for it.
@andrewsock1608
@andrewsock1608 Жыл бұрын
The shield is tough. There is no point in it being tougher because any heavier blows would break the arm and dislocate the shoulder holding the shield. None of those blows you delivered went through and if the shield was mounted on an arm all the blows would have glanced or entered the surface on an angled line making the shield thicker like sloped armour. The shield in my opinion is over tough. Great vid Tod I just loved it and the range of weapons you went through quickly was a top notch performance 👍👍👍
@nonpasprenompasdenomnonplu423
@nonpasprenompasdenomnonplu423 Жыл бұрын
I wonder though, situationally, over a long standing battle, or a campain maybe...
@andrewsock1608
@andrewsock1608 Жыл бұрын
@@nonpasprenompasdenomnonplu423 the thing is you need your shield to trap blades. If the shield is too tough it won’t trap blades it will just bounce them. On a campaign you have wagons full of shields. When expecting arrow storms you loosely tac some rawhide to your shield face if need be.
@nonpasprenompasdenomnonplu423
@nonpasprenompasdenomnonplu423 Жыл бұрын
@@andrewsock1608 Yeah it sounds right. Doubt it was ever done then. It's a bit sad, medieval composite materials sounds cool. But I guess it makes sense why they were not used much before space age : you need the right fiber and resin properties to get a really though material, else you just get the worst of both worlds.
@andrewsock1608
@andrewsock1608 Жыл бұрын
@@nonpasprenompasdenomnonplu423 oh I’m sure it was done, medieval composites were a thing for sure, but maybe the leather and or wood was thinner and lighter or maybe just the rim of the shield was thinner. Personally I think the glass was there to stop glue cracking as well as add friction. We know a bunch of loose layers is best at stopping projectiles and I’m sure they did too. Heater shields often had a metal trim or border so maybe they did want blades to bounce. Maybe the people trained that way liked the hard shields like tods and it was a bit lighter than metal trim.
@Scuba11Steve
@Scuba11Steve Жыл бұрын
One thing that I think isn't being taken into account here is the angle between the shield and the strike. You are giving these shields their worst possible chance for working by striking head on. Your swing with the falchion that cut diagonally into the wood showed us what I think is more likely to occur in an actual fight. The thickness of the shield is increased by the angle, which causes the sword to have to split more wood before penetrating through the back. In this way, it is similar to tank armor. With a round shield with a central held boss we can see this even more keenly, as the shield would pivot to create a greater angle while providing increased protection over the area a direct hit was likely to occur and where there would be risk of the person being directly behind the shield (hand holding the grip behind the boss). All this is to say I think your assessment about the more plain poplar shield is correct, as it would be even stronger in actual use than it is mounted on a block for striking. Great video Tod, as always.
@LoreTunderin
@LoreTunderin Жыл бұрын
I could see it being a worthwhile reinforcement to put around the rim of the shield and where your arm will be placed, or applied in strips to make a grid pattern.
@tods_workshop
@tods_workshop Жыл бұрын
I agree that arm protection seems like a good idea, but also seemed not to be done
@DIREWOLFx75
@DIREWOLFx75 Жыл бұрын
So, the advertising turned out to be TRUE. What a shocker, heh. And it is extremely likely that the recipe and its application can be optimised more. So, this basically provides a "stronger" shield option. Which would absolutely be an advantage in some situations. Only real question remaining, how often was it used? For example, it might be a good option for "friendly" tournaments. Where the extra weight is just a hazzle rather than a serious problem.
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