The Elliott you linked to is purely a near-wedge. Just with the grooves ground in. Many like this were done on the 'show' side only.
A style thing.
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I'm pretty sure real men don't say 'faux.'
I thought rattlers rattled. So I'll rattle on some. Hiking in the Mojave desert years back I climbed up a rock face (truthfully only about 9 to 10 feet up and fairly easy handholds) to get up to what looked like a shallow cave. My head was about level with the floor of the cave and a rattler rattled. It was like the sound was made through a megaphone. I popped off that rock like a......uh, like a mofo that thought he was going to get bit in the face by a rattle snake. :p
Blood line or Fuller, I always thought it was so that a weapon could be removed from a copse easier by letting air into the wound overcoming the suction around the weapon with a slight twist. From below it would appear it is simply a weight saver:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuller_(weapon)
Tom,
I have a triple concave, Portugese point razor with a 5/4 hollow spine. The shank is stamped Spiny Norman Lichfield
I have it around here somewhere, let me see if I can find it and I'll post a pic :thinking:
My son bought a book..
Sorry, savoured that sentence. :)
Anyway, my son bought a book on blacksmithing and I was reading it last night. Found info on swaging in there.
Attachment 207538Attachment 207539
So my wire end compression reference isn't really accurate beyond its a compression of 'something' in a tool to get a finished shape that's consistent and repeatable maybe?
A double swage? Is it something swaged twice in the one tool set or a different 'double swaging' tool all together,, TBD.
just sharing the knowledge.
Cheers.