Blacksmith and Metalworking Forum
This is a discussion on Epee within the Blacksmithin' forums, part of the Blacksmithing category; As i understand, an epee is like a rapier only it has no edge and is more like a thick ...
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Take a piece of steel, heat it red hot, beat it with a hammer till it looks like an Epee then quit.
__________________ Never try to teach a pig to sing, it wastes your time and annoys the pig. I do not suffer fools gladly. |
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This board is just chock full of helpful people, isn't it? Drenched- for a fencing foil, you'd probably be better off buying a rod of the appropriate material, which, I'm assuming, would be somewhere in the 1095 or spring steel range. I'd say start with something around 3/8" round, and shape it gently to a "point" of no less than 3/16". I believe a commercial foil is thinner, but I suspect you'll have difficulty keeping something that thin properly heated. Heat treating will be tricky, hopefully someone with far more expertise than I have, will chime in with some information. Doc.
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the interesting part is going to be that an epee is actually a 3 sided blade the epee is actually a modern derivative of the rapier. the 3 sided blade (similar to the 4 sided blade of the foil) was made in response to dueling in the 19th century changing from a "fight to the death" to a "first blood" style of encounter, whereby the first combatant to draw the blood of the other (typically by nicking or imparting a small cut) would be declared the victor...hence the epee traditionally has no point (with the exception of the 3 barbed point which was designed for modern fencing to make it easier to tell when a point had been scored...before the introduction of electricity anyway)... Last edited by inazuma_x; 09-05-2008 at 02:04 AM. |
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I would caution against fencing with any epee or foil you make yourself. Even professionally made foils can snap in the middle of a bout leaving a very sharp point. I know someone who was penetrated this way in a fencing bout. There were no serious consequences but it does give one pause. If I had to heat treat something like this, I would consider heating it by running a heavy current through it using my arc welder.
__________________ Life is short. Eat dessert first. Salad can wait. |
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Like inazuma_x says. Think triangular file tapered from about 1 inch down to a fine point and from 34-36 inches long. There are web sites that sell epee, foil and rapier replacement blades for fencers. Check some of them out.
__________________ Its not what you look at, its what you see. "If you can do it, it ain't braggin" Ty Cobb |
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an epee is a three sided blade. The only way I can think of forging one would to be to shape the blade to the shape you want and then use a special spring fuller to put the 3rd side on it. However using a forged epee would be a bad idea unless you can heat treat and temper spring steel perfectly. Even then i would not use it. I use an epee on a fairly regular basis I bought from triplette. If anyone would try using a hand forged epee against me I would have to decline to fight them. I trust Triplette blades over all others but even then they can break and cause serious harm. I had a friend of mine seriously hurt from a broken blade and all fencing stoped for the day. Here is Triplette's website if you would like to buy one Zen Warrior Armory - Zen Warrior Armory - Triplette Arms this is their site for SCA combat.
__________________ It is only through learning our flaws that we can uncover our perfection. Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison |
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A foil is a tapered rectangle , whereas a epee is a more like a flat blade thats forged into a V shape, I have lots and lots of broken foils and epee's and that a friend gives me from his fencing studio and let me tell you they are hard stuff, I cant imagine making one that could stand up half as well as a factory made blade. I use the fat end of the blade for cold chisels and punches, and the triplettes are my favoite too |
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I know nothing about epees or foils but triangular cross sections can easily be made in a 60 degree v-block. You start with round stock and forge, rotate, forge, rotate, until the shape is correct. This can be done with either sledge or power hammer.
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Before you go making something like an epee, foil, etc. find out what steel to use. They're made from a special alloy that doesn't break easily and breaks in a safe manner when it does. Even with modern alloys these things break regularly and I'd be surprised if a home made one, home heat treated would take very well just to being swung around. A triangular cross section has some serious stresses on it under the best of conditions. (steel, manufacture and heat treatment) The chances you'll be able to hand forge and heat treat one from spring (not a safe steel) or found stock and have something safe to use are slimmer than none. Have fun, play safe. Frosty
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