@@FedericoMalaguttiI’ve been fencing with the Maestro for a month now. Thrusting game is fun. Also, if I miss or feint the thrust, I can easily go for the zwerchhaus.
I used to have this feder. I liked it a lot, both for movement and for looks, though sadly mine got bent in a tournament within a year. It was bad enough that I couldn't use it anymore. I've seen multiple SIGI feders of students that also bent this way (also a SIGI king). So far I haven't seen it happen as much to other brands. Yet, I still like how it feels and I reccomend them to students who don't parttake in many tournaments. Do any of you have the same experience or did I just have bad luck?
@@XanderBruinsHEMA well, sigi take bends from time to time, but once straightened back they are back to normality basically. Yes every bent that it takes modifies the property of the blade and, on the long run, it will get easier and easier to bend on that spot. But it never happened to me to see one taking a bend which compromises the blade function.
My first Sigi feder took a set within a year. Took a second smaller set after 3. Half a year later it's still going... Now it is demoted to "'spare' since I decided not to wait for a failure before ordering a new feder. Sean Franklin of Sword STEM has an interesting article about blades with a set titled "Is A Sword With A Set Safer?". If the set in your blade was really bad you should have contacted Sigi, since they have a 1 year waranty on blades.
@@FedericoMalagutti Im shocked you think the standard is more agile than the lichy, I tried the lichty and the control with it was so much better, way more responsive than the standard- maybe I have a lemon of a standard? I find it very choppy and overly heavy.
@ I suspect it depends from when you bought it, because with times models changed a little. And of course to a degree they are all different. Anyway, I have two concept and a standard at home. The standard is more agile than both. All are 135 cms of course
@ theoretically speaking the Gothic is the most agile of the various models. Without taking in consideration the light of course, which is another, completely different thing.
I think now you've reviewed all of Sigi feders? If so I'd love to see a video comparing all of them now that you know them all so well
@@Artifact276 I miss maestro and gothic. I’ll most probably do the maestro Soon.
@@FedericoMalaguttiI’ve been fencing with the Maestro for a month now. Thrusting game is fun. Also, if I miss or feint the thrust, I can easily go for the zwerchhaus.
I used to have this feder. I liked it a lot, both for movement and for looks, though sadly mine got bent in a tournament within a year. It was bad enough that I couldn't use it anymore. I've seen multiple SIGI feders of students that also bent this way (also a SIGI king). So far I haven't seen it happen as much to other brands. Yet, I still like how it feels and I reccomend them to students who don't parttake in many tournaments. Do any of you have the same experience or did I just have bad luck?
@@XanderBruinsHEMA well, sigi take bends from time to time, but once straightened back they are back to normality basically. Yes every bent that it takes modifies the property of the blade and, on the long run, it will get easier and easier to bend on that spot. But it never happened to me to see one taking a bend which compromises the blade function.
My first Sigi feder took a set within a year. Took a second smaller set after 3. Half a year later it's still going... Now it is demoted to "'spare' since I decided not to wait for a failure before ordering a new feder. Sean Franklin of Sword STEM has an interesting article about blades with a set titled "Is A Sword With A Set Safer?".
If the set in your blade was really bad you should have contacted Sigi, since they have a 1 year waranty on blades.
What makes it more agile than the concept? Weight or balance?
@@robedwards6926 weight distribution I suspect. Balance varies in a minimal way and weight it’s basically the same.
@@FedericoMalagutti Im shocked you think the standard is more agile than the lichy, I tried the lichty and the control with it was so much better, way more responsive than the standard- maybe I have a lemon of a standard? I find it very choppy and overly heavy.
@ I suspect it depends from
when you bought it, because with times models changed a little. And of course to a degree they are all different. Anyway, I have two concept and a standard at home. The standard is more agile than both.
All are 135 cms of course
@@FedericoMalagutti How does the Gothic compare to them?
@ theoretically speaking the Gothic is the most agile of the various models. Without taking in consideration the light of course, which is another, completely different thing.
Is that a 28cm or 30cm crossguard?
@@jeinto1234 30 cms
Speed holes do work?
@@develascofuente definitely! I should carve some more in it!
@FedericoMalagutti im waiting for one with speed holes hope Will work well
the cost isnt so friendly
@@BBanzaj he! That’s the issue of SIGI on average.