craigoaus Posted November 22, 2016 Report Posted November 22, 2016 Hello, I'm a newbie to Japanese Swords so please be gentle. I recently acquired this sword and I would like to learn as much about it as possible and how to best look after it. All opinions and advice (good or bad) will be appreciated. Thank you in anticipation. Quote
Grey Doffin Posted November 22, 2016 Report Posted November 22, 2016 Sword care and etiquette: http://www.nbthk-ab.org/Etiquette.htm Grey 1 Quote
craigoaus Posted November 22, 2016 Author Report Posted November 22, 2016 Thanks Grey, can anyone tell me where I can get a 'cleaning kit' preferably from within Australia but otherwise from overseas is fine. Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted November 23, 2016 Report Posted November 23, 2016 Craig, I got mine on Amazon for about $11 USD. Got yourself a gorgeous gunto there my boy! Do yourself a favor and take some pics of the blade, without the fittings and repost. Looks like an older blade than WWII to me - 2 mekugi holes, worn or reshaped blade tip, squared-off nakago (tang end). The tsuba (hand guard) is a more expensive upgrade, and the fact that it came with the rank tassel is a bonus! 1 Quote
Stephen Posted November 23, 2016 Report Posted November 23, 2016 Do yourself favor, dont buy a cheap kit esp with the red ball, notorious for having corse grain that may scratch your blade, id get a kit from Fred Lohmam, Bill Rannow may still have some for sale, Bob Bensons uchiko balls are top of the line, some better from Japan but i dont have that info ready at hand. http://www.Japanese-swords.com/pages/maint.htm http://www.artswords.com/supplies.htm Our Oz members may have contact or check with John G http://www.nihonto.com.au/ http://www.nihonto.com.au/html/sword_accessories.html 3 Quote
Baka Gaijin Posted November 23, 2016 Report Posted November 23, 2016 To echo wise old Stephen: RED BALL BAD!!! WHITE BALL OK ish Agree with Thomas et al : nihonto.co.au Pip Pip Cheerio!! 1 Quote
Stefan Posted November 23, 2016 Report Posted November 23, 2016 Uchiko is always bad. I use cleaning alcohol. It does not scratch the blade, nor does it harm the polish in terms of weakening the hadori. After using uchiko over the years any hadori is gone an one ends up with an ugly form of pseudo sashikomi.. Quote
Shugyosha Posted November 23, 2016 Report Posted November 23, 2016 Do you have any close-up pictures of the blade? The activity might give a clue as to its age. As regards the tang, I'm suspicious of the colour of the patina (too red for me) which doesn't look quite right and also the metal of the tang seems too smooth. This makes me wonder whether this isn't a more modern blade with the tang adjusted to give an older look. Best, John Quote
craigoaus Posted November 23, 2016 Author Report Posted November 23, 2016 the colour of the tang might not be 100% accurate my camera seems to freak out with a black background and picks up a reddish colour cast. I'll try to get better colour accuracy. 2 Quote
Stefan Posted November 23, 2016 Report Posted November 23, 2016 Unfortunatly, I must agree. There is something wrong with the nakago. The Sabi partially peels of. This is not a good sign. In most cases it is a sign of repatination or forgery. I do hope that i am wrong. Stefan Quote
paulb Posted November 23, 2016 Report Posted November 23, 2016 Before we get too carried away about the nakago can you give us some dimensions? the blade looks to have a very deep sori, however the colour and texture of the nakago suggests the blade is O-suriage and what you are seeing in the nakago is repatinated blade steel. These are not necessarily indicative of a problem but it does make trying to assess age difficult. If it is shortened then the original sori must have been substantial. My initial reaction is that it looks to be a good piece, probably quite late, shin-shinto rather than later but I would like some dimensions and an image of the whole naked blade if possible. best regards Paul Quote
Stephen Posted November 23, 2016 Report Posted November 23, 2016 (edited) red rust is bad rust, a old rag that you have oiled something with needs to wipe the tang, id take a shot next to a window for natural light so we can see what you have nakago wise. PS also whats under the habaki. Edited November 23, 2016 by Stephen Quote
Stephen Posted November 23, 2016 Report Posted November 23, 2016 I see you have been told on MSoIJ(shingunto) that you have a good blade, id follow Chris B. and Tom C.H. advice, and Dave R. 1 Quote
Shamsy Posted November 25, 2016 Report Posted November 25, 2016 As Thomas said Craig, nihonto.com.au is our best aussie supplier. And welcome to the board. Quote
David Flynn Posted December 6, 2016 Report Posted December 6, 2016 Poor mans cleaning kit, Isopropyl Alcohol ( 99% min) and machine grade general purpoise oil. There is a definative move away from uchiko, except on dirty blades. Don't forget, uchiko is abrasive. 1 Quote
The_ozzy_samurai Posted December 6, 2016 Report Posted December 6, 2016 Uchiko i believe is ground down Uchigimori stone what grade or density who knows most likely Hato or Jito grade stone?, i can tell you right now it will scuff or scratch the blade very nicely if that is the look your after? and from what i see you have a nice old blade there i wouldnt touch it or any blade of mine or anyones im working on with Uchiko after a polish, Trust me Hadori polish takes so long to achieve as i have done it on several blades most blades take me 3-4 weeks of hadori work on a normal 25-26" blade,to think of somone using Uchiko on a blade i had polished makes me want to kick them in the nuts! after spending so long to make it nice as possible, This will sound totally wrong to some and i will get some back lash from this but who cares im offering advice based on my experience with maintaining blades maybe in 40 years i may have a change of heart but for now it works fine for me,during the process of polishing a blade the blade is wet each night after finishing my work on any blade i would spray WD-40 all over blade and wipe down and use simple good quality fresh engine oil on a nice clean soft piece of T-shirt material rag,i used motor oil on all my swords for many years no issues at all thats on some very high end swords too, if there is anything left on blade after a wipe with WD-40 like black stains or slight rust spots then its safe to say its staying there,you cant grind it off with uchiko,dont believe everything the sword god's say there are simple options out there, thats my 2 cents worth mate,Cheer's Julian 2 Quote
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