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Old 13th July 2014, 06:18 PM   #1
rasjid
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Default Opinion please--Gunto w/Old blade?

This is the same katana from my other post. My blade is the one on the Left. Similar blade was taken for comparison.

Any comment on the blade? Possibility older then the koshirae? I mean mounted with older blade.?

thank you.
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Last edited by rasjid; 14th July 2014 at 02:45 AM. Reason: update title
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Old 15th July 2014, 02:15 PM   #2
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Your blade does look to be much older than the fittings. Looks like the tang has been cleaned, so hard to tell. Possibly late Koto period? Fittings are typical WWII military style. Awesome temper line.
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Old 15th July 2014, 09:27 PM   #3
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I could be wrong Trenchy, but 2 tangs are shown & I think the uncleaned one is the posters?

Lets hope so anyway!

spiral
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Old 15th July 2014, 11:07 PM   #4
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You are correct spiral. However, both tangs have been cleaned. rasjid's, as well, just not as aggressively.
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Old 15th July 2014, 11:14 PM   #5
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Ahh I see!

On those size/quality pics I cant spot the cleaning of the better one on my screen..

But I take your word for it.

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Old 16th July 2014, 01:01 AM   #6
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Yes, mine is on the left n handle rusty as shown. On the right is someone else in Japanese shop for comparison.
How to stop the rust getting worse? I understand that we should not "clean" the nakago. Maybe preserve it?
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Old 16th July 2014, 01:28 AM   #7
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Don't do anything to the nakago. That rust, is considered patina on Japanese blades. It tells you the true age of the sword. Yours has some deep pitting. The nakago should be black, not gray. It has been cleaned. The only thing that is sometimes done, is to burnish the tang, with a piece of bone. This will only remove surface rust scale, so as to be able to read the signature.
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Old 16th July 2014, 03:07 AM   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by trenchwarfare
Don't do anything to the nakago. That rust, is considered patina on Japanese blades. It tells you the true age of the sword. Yours has some deep pitting. The nakago should be black, not gray. It has been cleaned. The only thing that is sometimes done, is to burnish the tang, with a piece of bone. This will only remove surface rust scale, so as to be able to read the signature.
Red rust would be undesirable, the nakago should have an age related patina which is a form of oxidation that will not harm the underlying metal, red rust on the other hand is considered to be live and will continue to eat away at the metal underneath until it is stopped.
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Old 16th July 2014, 03:47 AM   #9
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Indeed.
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Old 16th July 2014, 07:17 AM   #10
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Is there anything i can do? Anyone? To preserve or protect from rust?

Thanks
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Old 17th July 2014, 01:30 PM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rasjid
Is there anything i can do? Anyone? To preserve or protect from rust?

Thanks
Here is Ian Bottomley's recommended method for treating rust on Japanese armor, you can do something similar with the nakago of your sword,

Quote:
Use a mixture of boiled linseed oil thinned with white spirit in a ratio of approximately 50 / 50 - it isn't critical. The mixture was applied with a paint brush over a small area and allowed to soak in for a few minutes before rubbing the area with a chisel shaped piece of stag antler.
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Old 18th July 2014, 11:42 AM   #12
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Noted. Thank you estcrh.
Will keep the info and will do some testing with other material first.

Regards
Rasjid
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Old 18th July 2014, 11:53 AM   #13
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I would suggest washing it with warm soapy water with a stiff
tooth brush, drying well and then a coating of oil. Don't want to
risk damaging the nakago.

Rich S
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Old 18th July 2014, 02:06 PM   #14
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Dear Rasjid,

The pictures are not very helpfull. Difficult to see prperly. I suggest you take a look at 'nihonto message board', ( google search ) this site is simmilar to 'vikingsword' though completely about nihonto and directly related stuff like tsuba's, et cetera. You will find a helpfull community with lots of knowledge about nihonto, including preservation.

Do not touch the nakago if you don't know what you're doing! it could ruin the value! It is not to compare with indonesian weapons where the 'patina' on a peksi or tang is not of very great importance.

Grettings Ron
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Old 18th July 2014, 06:01 PM   #15
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Dear Ronpakis and Rich,

Thank you. Well noted. Yes, its indeed different with Indonesian peksi in Keris.
I'm open for suggestion at the mean time its stay as is and oiled then wipe dry.

regards
Rasjid
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