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03-25-2009, 10:55 AM
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i think i might die if i look at the others.>_< or go blind. my mom wont buy me a sword.>.> she thinks i would kill someone. *she might be right* I could never be happier. I found my missing piece and i know he wont leave me. song by simple plan. +{Member of the Crusnik Clan--Crusnik 04}+ +{Codename: Abel}+ I'm sorry for acting like this... |
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03-25-2009, 11:00 AM
The Address is 北海道小樽市花園町東4丁目二番地 for a person named 星靖.
4-2 Higashi Hanazono-Cho Otaru-City Hokkaido Yasudhi Hosi This address is no longer available. Here is the nearest address. http://maps.google.co.jp/maps?f=q&so...,0.026393&z=15 Links to Japan forum Tips : 1) How to remove spam massages on you screen 2) How to post Youtube movies or Pictures ... and Ask professional translator for your business work. You can not get useful business resources for free. |
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03-25-2009, 07:11 PM
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Type 98, were a over-simplified version of the 94. They introduced a wooden scabbard and on the later models tsuka was also made from wood, however, saya still sports metallic kojiri and koiguchi, as well as a metallic base of the mounting space. The fact that the blade is oiled, does not mean it was oiled straight out of the factory (though I am unaware about the protection for the blades they applied for these swords, if any). Well, the bottom line is that it could, theoretically, be a kai gunto... I don't know much about them though and I really don't see any other alternatives... The pre-WW2 army swords did not look like a katana and were made with much more detail... so unless it is some bizzare custom-made sword, I am sticking with the opinion that it's a Type 98 shin gunto. |
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03-26-2009, 01:08 AM
The blade on the OP's has a strong tooran temper mark along it's entire length. Shin-gunto swords came with no such temper mark (as they weren't tempered in water, but oil), or they had a false sugu temper mark which was applied with a hard buffer
When I say "lamination", I don't mean "oiled". Laminated steel is that which is made by folding the steel many times during the forging process. Once completed, the metal has a faint wood-grain finish (called "hada" in Japanese). I don't care much about the fittings, because they say much less than what the blade itself says. Old swords have often had their fittings changed many times over the years for fashion's sake, or for the sake of practicality. And, as I said before, there is an address tag attached to the sword. These tages were attached to swords when they were stored for safe keeping. No one would bother to put such a tag on a shin-gunto sword. |
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