Difference between revisions of "Fencing Draft:Appendix 2"

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{{DISPLAYTITLE:Appendix 2: Glossary}}
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==Terms related to Fencing==
 
==Terms related to Fencing==

Revision as of 23:35, 9 October 2020


Terms related to Fencing

HOLD
A call to immediately stop all activity on the field for safety concerns. Any person may call a HOLD
Line
In melee combat, a minimum of two combatants, on the same side, in contiguous mutual weapons support range.

Terms related to Types of Blows

Thrust
Scoring a hit on an opponent by touching them with the front (i.e. head-on cross section) of the point of the blade.
Tip Cut
Scoring a hit on an opponent by placing the point of the blade upon them and pulling the point across in a line.
Draw Cut
Scoring a hit on an opponent by placing the edge of the blade upon them opponent and pulling or pushing the edge across their body.
Percussive Blow
In Cut and Thrust Fencing, scoring a hit on an opponent by cutting with the edge of blade in a single, smooth motion, using controlled force.

Terms related to Acknowledging Blows

Body
The body includes the head and entire helmet, the neck, chest, abdomen, back, and the regions on the inner part of the upper arm and the inner thigh extending 10cm down from the armpit and the groin, respectively.
Hand
The hand, including all fingers, up to and including the wrist.
Arm
The arm not including the hand or the area defined as part of the body.
Upper Leg
The upper leg, not including the area defined as part of the body, down to and including the top of the kneecap and the crease at the back of the knee.
Lower Leg
The foot, lower leg, and knee below the upper leg.
Torso
The torso includes the chest, abdomen, back, and the regions on the inner part of the upper arm extending 10cm down from the armpit.

Terms related to Equipment

Abrasion-resistant material
Material that will withstand normal combat stresses (such as being snagged by burr on a metal blade) without tearing. Examples include, but are not limited to:
  • broadcloth
  • a single layer of heavy poplin cloth (35% cotton, 65% polyester; "trigger" cloth)
  • track pants
  • opaque cotton, poly-cotton or lycra/spandex mix tights. Nylon pantyhose and cotton gauze shirts are examples of unacceptable materials.
Blunt
A protective covering for the tip of a sword or dagger:
  • A blunt can be made of shatter-resistant polymer, rubber or leather.
  • It must have a minimum size of 10mm in any direction that strikes the opponent.
  • Polymer and rubber blunts must be at least 3mm thick between the striking surface and the tip or edge of the blade.
  • Leather blunts must be at least 1.6mm thick.
External Reproductive Organs
In this context, external reproductive organs refers to penis and/or testicles.
Hemangioma
A collection of blood vessels at the surface of the skin, characterised as a raised red growth. Hemangiomas that bleed more easily than regular skin must be covered by rigid material.
Penetration-resistant material
Material that will predictably withstand a puncture as shown by passing a penetration test. (see Appendix 4). The following materials are known to pass these tests when new:
  • four-ounce (1.60 mm) leather
  • four layers of heavy poplin cloth
  • ballistic nylon rated to at least 550 Newtons
  • commercial fencing clothing rated to at least 550 Newtons
  • chain mail made of welded or riveted steel rings that will not admit a 5/32 inch (4 mm) diameter probe. Rings no greater than 0.155 inches (4 mm) in internal diameter made of wire no less than 0.020 inches (0.5 mm) thick meet this requirement
The above materials need only be tested at the marshal's discretion; all other materials must be tested the first time new gear is used, or if no marshal on the field knows a given piece of gear to have been tested.
Under Armour, Spandex, and other similar stretchy materials are not suitable as penetration-resistant materials and must not be included in testing. Kevlar is not an acceptable material, as it degrades rapidly.
Resilient padding
Material that compresses under pressure from a thumb but returns to its shape within 3 seconds of the pressure being removed.
Rigid material
Material that will not significantly flex, spread apart, or deform under pressure of 12kg applied by a standard mask tester, repeatedly to any single point. Examples of rigid material are:
  • 22 gauge stainless steel (0.8 mm)
  • 20 gauge mild steel (1.0 mm)
  • 16 gauge aluminium, copper, or brass (1.6 mm)
  • one layer of hardened heavy leather (8 ounce, 3.2 mm)
Perforated material that meets this requirement must have holes no larger than 3 mm in any direction, and a spacing of at least 5 mm centre-to-centre.