by whiteknight » Mon 12 Sep 2005, 21:11:29
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Doly', 'W')hat about throwable knives? They're reasonably small to carry without attracting attention and they have a much larger range than swords. Plus, they probably make good carving knives as well, which you can't say of swords.
I've played with thrown weapons a bit, was a weird obsesion of my misspent youth. Actualy a whole batch of us woudl routinely screw around and either buy or make some type of thrown weapon and then we woudl play around testing them on things.
My best was a throwing star made of used sickle blades from a windrower... Four triangular blades each about the size of your palm and sharp as the dickens. Thrown well it woudl literaly tear through an old car door and stop just protruding from the interior material... pretty cool. Got me detention for a week for trying to sell them to other kids.
Anyhow, unless you get to to point where you hit a palm sized target swinging side to side from a tree the damned things are useless. Any hit outside of a hand, neck or maybe groin is just going to piss the guy off. The skull is just too thick for a knife to punch through unless you are friggin Arnie. The knife has too little weight to generate the kinetic force neccisary for a serious penetrating wound. Also the design you need for throwing sort of makes them uselss for any utility work. Mind you a Sykes Fairborne (sp?) commando knife is a pretty sight. Needle pointed, long and thin. Real good for stabing or slicing a throat... but thats not the beast we be speaking of here.
Now axes... thares a beast of a differant stripe... but throwing them is a royal bitch and hiding them is as tough. But if you can get good.. well a whole world of death dealing opens up. They are heavy enough to impart sufficent energy to crack a skull or break ribs to get to vitals such as heart and lungs. They also do a damn fine job chopping trees and other woodworking tasks.
My preferance is the axe, tomohawk to be exact. Damn nice for all around weaponry.