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Swordbucket (2.0)
http://67.205.157.234/forums/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=9692
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Author:  eswube [ September 24th, 2019, 3:04 pm ]
Post subject:  Swordbucket (2.0)

By popular request. ;) (http://shipbucket.com/forums/viewtopic. ... 53#p191153)
Previous thread is hard to find (due to unassuming title) and contents are basically gone.
Scale is of course the same as in Gunbucket.
(in alphabetical order)


5.11 Side Kick Boot Knife
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Butter Knife
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Claymore (scale?)
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Glock Field Knife 78 / Survival Knife 81
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KA-BAR
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M1873 Sabre Bayonnet
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M1892 Bayonnet
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M1898 Klewang
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M1918 Trench Knife
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Pattern 1796 Light Cavalry Sabre
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Postførerverge M1846 (in fact it's a knife-pistol!)
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SA Dagger
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SOG Dagger
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Victorinox Huntsman
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Here's something not exactly out of this world, but I suppose some will like. ;)
Star Wars Lightsaber
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Author:  Novice [ September 24th, 2019, 8:25 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Swordbucket (2.0)

The butter knife was posted by Thiel

Author:  eswube [ September 24th, 2019, 9:59 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Swordbucket (2.0)

Thanks Novice! It's updated now. ;)

Author:  reytuerto [ September 24th, 2019, 11:18 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Swordbucket (2.0)

Hi guys!
Some bayonets of the smokeless powder era:
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Cheers!

Author:  reytuerto [ September 25th, 2019, 2:06 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Swordbucket (2.0)

And now the American blades:
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Cheers!

Author:  eswube [ September 25th, 2019, 10:12 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Swordbucket (2.0)

Wooow! That's a great series! :D

Author:  reytuerto [ September 26th, 2019, 12:31 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Swordbucket (2.0)

Thanks, Eswube! (and I have some more! :D , that is because in my gunbucket own archive, if is possible, I try to have the rifle with the matching bayonet. But I am rather shy to show an arbitrary modified drawing, sometimes of a very veteran artist done without granting his permission). Here more vintage bayonets:
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Cheers!

Author:  reytuerto [ September 26th, 2019, 11:29 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Swordbucket (2.0)

Hi, guys! Here are the most modern bayonets! All of the post-war era, and some are the blades used by some of the last assault rifles.

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Cheers!

Author:  eswube [ September 29th, 2019, 8:11 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Swordbucket (2.0)

Fantastic! :D

Author:  reytuerto [ May 5th, 2020, 11:57 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Swordbucket (2.0)

Good evening, gentlemen.
The swordbucket can´t be complete without one the most important blades of the ancient world. The mighty Roman Gladius.
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Derived of a celtiberic sword used alongside the falcata by the iberian mercenary troops of Hannibal during the Second Punic War, this sword impressed the romans and was quickly adopted as the gladius hispaniensis, or spanish sword. A nimble weapon in close combat, it was specially good with the point, but is also able to made vicious cuts. Here is depicted the Mainz type, with a hilt made of bronze, dark noble wood and bone.

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Another variant of gladius was the Fulham type, with a slightly shorter blade length but with a narrower and a little longer point, parallel sides with the exception of the shoulders. The hilt was en general lines the same.

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The final variant of the gladius was the Pompeii type. Even shorter, with parallel sides from the hilt to the point, which was shorter. The Pompeii type was cheaper and easier to made. The hilt was similar to the other precedent models.

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The spatha was first a cavalry sword, the longer blade gives a better reach, but in the late II Century AD it was being carried by foot legionaries and was the standard sword of the late Roman Empire. The spatha survived the empire as it was the basis of several barbarian swords of the Migration Period, depicted here is the Podlodow type, found in Poland, far outside the european eastern boundaries of the Empire. It was a 3 feet long sword, with a hilt not dissimilar to the hilt of a gladius, the blade had a double fuller almost to the point.

Probably, Julius Ceasar was stabbed to dead with this kind of blade:
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The roman pugio is a combat knife which was excellent for stabbing, it had a full length central rib for additional rigidity. The blade was riveted to the handle both at the tang and at the shoulders. The hilt was made from layers of wood, horn, bone or completely of metal (steel, bronze, or even silver). Cheers.

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