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Cold Steel – Hutton Training Saber

SKU: CS92BKTTNS Categories: , , Tag:
(2 customer reviews)

$119.99

In stock

Cold Steels Hutton style military training saber is a lightweight and dextrous sparring sword with a blade forged from 1065 high carbon steel. The steel is tempered to easily flex and spring back into form as befits a sparring and training sword. The blade edges and tip are blunted for safety and the guard affords excellent protection for the sword hand. The hilt is steel and the grip is bound in black leather with inlaid braided wire.

This saber is Cold Steels version of a Hutton style training saber and it is an interpretation of the sword based on a pair of originals in Cold Steels collection which were used for extensive sparring and training by Lynn Thompson, Luke LaFontaine and Anthony Delongis. Training swords of this type were used in the late 19th century to train cavalrymen in mounted and unmounted saber fencing and the techniques used in this Victorian swordsmanship originated largely with 19th century Italian masters.

Overall Length38 1/8''
Blade Length32 1/4''
Weight1 lb 3.5 oz
EdgeBlunt
Width20 mm
Thickness4.5 mm - 2.7 mm
PommelNut
P.O.B.5 1/8''
Grip Length4 1/2''
Blade [1065 High Carbon Steel]
TypeSaber
ClassSport Combat
ManufacturerCold Steel
Country of OriginIndia

2 reviews for Cold Steel – Hutton Training Saber

  1. Greg

    a little too light for it’s own good it’s a pretty close thing to the Hanwei Hutton sabre, but the Cold steel model is very thin, slightly longer, and certainly a lot more bendy and whippy. i will try to shorten the blade a little, to make up for the extra flex it gets. i think it could stand to be a couple ounces heavier, and thicker overall.

  2. TCvG,II

    Minor drawbacks, good blade Its on the light side for military or polish saber but suited very well to practice of italian dueling saber. Despite the lack of weight, seems actually a bit more hardy than the hanwei huttons, though I still need to put it more to the test.
    The only major downside in my view is a problem that only applies to lightweight training weapons: the blade in it is peened in, not fastened in with a nut like the hanwei models. This means when the blade eventually sustains too much damage and wears out, as all swords eventually do one day, you’d either need to buy a whole new one or grind off the peen and replace it with a non-coldsteel blade (since they obviously wouldn’t be selling replacements for something that wasn’t intended to be replaced). That being said, the price point makes it rather affordable, so its not a weighty investement despite the drawbacks. It is a good competitor to the hanwei hutton, and (as of writing this) still one of the few off-the-rack dueling sabers for HEMA, which makes it accessible with the bonus of having decent quality.

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