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A short sword or saber could conceivably
be designed to contract completely into a
5 or 6 inch hilt by collapsing in on itself in
three sheet-metal type pieces per length
and in a telescoping form like an
extendable antenna. When the blade was
retracted the individual segments would
retract
in on each other in a T type
formation with the back, dull side of the
blade being one thin, flat, trapezoidal/
triangular piece, one curved piece angled
to join with the other two would serve as a
support piece, and another similarly
shaped piece, slightly broader than the
support piece, would be edged for use as
the cutting edge. There would be from
three to five segments of these three
pieces, each as long as the hilt, to form
the entire blade. Each of the segments
could be individually spring loaded and
attached to the segment that preceded it,
the last one being attached to the hilt. In
order to lock into place by was or
interlocking c-cuts or bends or perhaps
another mechanism I have not thought of.
The release of the blade could be a two
part lock to ensure security. One would
have to squeeze the grip or hand guard
tight onto the hilt and flip some sort of
switch in order to deploy the blade.
Though this would not be so useful for the
military in combat it could perhaps be
used like a machete, as a utility blade
instead of a weapon. It would reduce the
space needed to pack it and would ensure
safety until it was deployed.
Compact Sword
Compact_20Sword_20Blade Similar, but not equal. [Zimmy, Mar 18 2006]
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Annotation:
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Sounds great, but I don't believe it is physically possible to build a working extensible blade that long. |
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