I have very little knowledge on swords. Im guessing one is a calvary or parade sword and the other a nco sword??? If there is anything special to them, I can take more pics. The samurai sword has a couple chips in the blade and a little rust. Is there any way to remove the rust?
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Two Japanese Swords
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any information you can give me would be much appreciated. thanksLast edited by coloradocowboy; 10-30-2013, 06:11 PM.
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The first sword is a standard mount Army shingunto mount of the type worn during WW2. The second sword is the older form army mount replaced by the mount of sword #1. Period photos show some combat officers still retaining the older mount during the war. Both appear to be hand forged blades and more can be determined by removal of the handles to see the tang. Please photograph the sword tang vertical with the top being towards the cutting edge and the bottom the butt of the tang.
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Originally posted by Bob Coleman View PostThe first sword is a standard mount Army shingunto mount of the type worn during WW2. The second sword is the older form army mount replaced by the mount of sword #1. Period photos show some combat officers still retaining the older mount during the war. Both appear to be hand forged blades and more can be determined by removal of the handles to see the tang. Please photograph the sword tang vertical with the top being towards the cutting edge and the bottom the butt of the tang.
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Originally posted by gunto View PostDont clean the blade , only little sword oil and wipe off again.Last edited by coloradocowboy; 10-30-2013, 08:36 PM.
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Originally posted by Bob Coleman View PostA nail set is the perfect tool to push the pin out. Pliers can fracture the pin. They are meant to push out, not pull. If you have a block of wood, use it along with a hammer to break the handle loose.
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You are on the right track. If you can't get all the kanji into one shot and have them all legible then tell us how many there are in total and just include a couple in each picture starting from the top and working down. It's often easier to get two or three in focus at one time than it is to get half a dozen or more if you are not used to doing it on a regular basis.
I wouldn't try to enhance the kanji yet. They are well enough cut that when shown in focus should be readable.
Regards,
Stu
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