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I hope a side question is ok while we wait for comments. Have we discussed these common markings? They are, of course, very present on tourist pieces from Thailand and I usually take it as a bad sign when I see them. However, you do see them on clearly authentic, and old pieces, as the case with this sword.
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Jeff,
I think you are correct to be cautious about some of these marklngs. The flowing sinusoidal waves on the original post in this thread are very traditional decorative traits, mainly associated with northern Thai/Lao blades but occasionally seen more widely (such as on "Montagnard" examples). Swords and knives with these markings have functional blades (I have not seen an example with a clearly poor blade) and I don't think of them as designed to be tourist pieces.
On the other hand, low quality tourist blades often have the features shown on Detlef's vintage example (clearly not a low grade blade): namely, the lightly engraved lines running parallel to the spine and elongated S-shapes that resemble integration signs used in calculus. The latter, often punched in groups somewhat randomly along the blade, occur a lot on the poorly tempered blades of tourist swords that were sold to GIs during the Vietnam war (1960s and 1970s), and subsequently. These are the marks that raise suspicions about quality (Detlef's nice older example is the exception). Hence, Iain's caution about looking at the whole sword is very well placed.
Regards, Ian.