Kmad Posted January 12, 2018 Report Posted January 12, 2018 Hi I have acquired this Gunto in a job lot, along with some v good Indian swords and a Wakizashi, I have this up on the genuine Japanese part of the forum and it is getting a good response. I am assuming it is a Type 98 officers sword, machine made, and the paint on the Nakago is manafacture labeling and doesn’t help much Nothing else on either side of the Nakago The hamon is quiet strong, v hard to photograph and I now appreciate your groups photography a lot more. And I would put the blade condition at a medium. Scabbard is metal beneath the leather cover Blade length is 68 cm So am I correct in my identification and is the tassel ok to this sword and what rank does this indicate, I will probably be selling this to subsidies a potential polish on the Wakizashi, if it is Ok with moderator what is approx value of this sword Many thanks Ken 1 Quote
vajo Posted January 12, 2018 Report Posted January 12, 2018 Not machine made, first look gendaito. But i could see the pictures only on a smartphone. I'm on work. ???? Yes true Type98 and obviously a good blade. Well done. Quote
PNSSHOGUN Posted January 12, 2018 Report Posted January 12, 2018 It's genuine, to me it looks like an early production Type 98 with an uncommon thick non-pierced tsuba. The Tassel is Company grade; Lieutenant to Captain ranks. As for the sword, hard to tell with those photos and rough condition. The hamon in parts reminds one of oil tempered semi-traditional blades. If it's an earlier production piece it's not uncommon for non traditional blades to have no stamps or markings. Value would probably be under 1000 usd due to the condition and uncertainty of the blade and condition of the mounts. Quote
Kmad Posted January 12, 2018 Author Report Posted January 12, 2018 Hi Both, Thanks for information and it looks as if i did OK on this sword as well. Pity there is no markings on the sword but it is exciting when you take off the Tsuka and get to see what is underneath. I taught the mounts looked OK condition, where do they fall down as not being in good condition? (just information for potential future purchases not criticising your commnets) I took it that the green on the Menuki would be a good thing to indicate the sword has not been messed with. Regards Ken Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted January 12, 2018 Report Posted January 12, 2018 Ken, I agree with all the above, though it's possible the blade is late Shinto or Shin Shinto, due to the civilian menugi. You normally only see that on family blades that were militarized. "Condition" varies depending upon the collector. This gunto has personality and a life to it, so that will appeal to some, whereas, some collectors look for "pristine" gunto that have shiny blades, untouched/undamaged fittings. I'd say $1,000-1,200 USD. Selling it is a crap-shoot right now, as the market has slumped a bit for officer gunto. Their figure at 900 is probably where they are actually selling, though I feel they are worth more than that. 1 Quote
David Flynn Posted January 13, 2018 Report Posted January 13, 2018 Unsigned showato. Bruce, look at the standard Seki Togariba Hamon. 1 Quote
Kmad Posted January 13, 2018 Author Report Posted January 13, 2018 Hi David Sorry are you agreeing with Bruce or are saying he is incorrect in that it might be showato Also what is a Seki Togariba Hamon and is this what I have I am totally out of my knowledge base here. Thanks Ken Quote
Jean Posted January 13, 2018 Report Posted January 13, 2018 Seki is a Japanese town/municipality where there was an Asenal which produces semi traditional swords (oil quench) Hamon is the temper line, togari is a type of pattern in the hamon which is one or several peaks going up, typical of Old Mino province where is located Seki Quote
TheGermanBastard Posted January 13, 2018 Report Posted January 13, 2018 I also vote for Showato. 1 Quote
TheGermanBastard Posted January 13, 2018 Report Posted January 13, 2018 Ken, I agree with all the above, though it's possible the blade is late Shinto or Shin Shinto, due to the civilian menugi. You normally only see that on family blades that were militarized. "Condition" varies depending upon the collector. This gunto has personality and a life to it, so that will appeal to some, whereas, some collectors look for "pristine" gunto that have shiny blades, untouched/undamaged fittings. I'd say $1,000-1,200 USD. Selling it is a crap-shoot right now, as the market has slumped a bit for officer gunto. Their figure at 900 is probably where they are actually selling, though I feel they are worth more than that. Hi bruce, I am not with you on this. While I can not say for sure wheter it is Showato or Gendaito it is definately not a Shinshinto or even Shinto blade. Also I am not on the price estimate in this case. The mounts are in average to poor condition and the blade is too. This sword is under 1k retail. But what do I know ... in the end it is what someone is willing / going to pay for it. USD 600 - 800 sounds like a more reasonable call in my cheap oppinion. Atleast if you put it on eBay and comparing it to other offerings there. The cheapst offer sets the standard ... Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted January 13, 2018 Report Posted January 13, 2018 Hi bruce, I am not with you on this. While I can not say for sure wheter it is Showato or Gendaito it is definately not a Shinshinto or even Shinto blade. Also I am not on the price estimate in this case. The mounts are in average to poor condition and the blade is too. This sword is under 1k retail. But what do I know ... in the end it is what someone is willing / going to pay for it. USD 600 - 800 sounds like a more reasonable call in my cheap oppinion. Atleast if you put it on eBay and comparing it to other offerings there. The cheapst offer sets the standard ... After looking at the nakago again, I have seen showato with rust/patina like this too, which is why I simply said it was "possible." But another thing I realized, is that family blade, remounted most often have a second mekugi hole in the nakago, which this one does not. That added to the hamon info, I'd agree the weight of the info points to standard wartime showato. The civi menugi puzzles me still. As to price, you just proved my point! Ha! 1 Quote
Dave R Posted January 13, 2018 Report Posted January 13, 2018 Apparently menuki are one of the areas where customising was allowed, I have pics of a few Gunto with old or otherwise non standard menuki. Probably easier and lower scale than having a mon fixed to the kabutogane. 1 Quote
PNSSHOGUN Posted January 14, 2018 Report Posted January 14, 2018 Don't know how you'd get Shinto from this blade, has the tell tale dark spots in the peaks of the Hamon, *typical of Showato. Quote
Shamsy Posted January 14, 2018 Report Posted January 14, 2018 Type-pickle: When auto correct ruins your post 1 Quote
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