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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Oahu, Hawaii
Posts: 166
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JT, the Pelican cases you refer to are definately the E ticket. We use them for all our weapons and radios. They are however expensive. The nicest thing is you dont have to use any additional materials. When the case closes the foam fits tight (both inner sides are foamed) meaning that anything you put inside will be squezzed gently between both layers and will NOT move. Our cases have two layers of foam on each side allowing you cut out a profile of the equipment to be carried in the first layer, and the first layer on the other side if needed, when it is too bulky for the case to close and still have the outer layer between the equipment and the case. The foam cuts easily with a serated knife. Highly recommended!
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Kansas City
Posts: 177
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i have an old rifle case that zelbone gave me last year that i store my Koaisshin Mantetsu Gunto and several other swords. I have also transported swords in them. they take a beating and keep on protecting.
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Virginia
Posts: 520
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Thanks everyone. It sounds like this is the way I should go
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 24
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Most used, ratty gun cases (which is all I ever use!) seem to cost about $10 at a gun shop or gun show. One alternative is to use some PVC drain line (this is the light, thinwall stuff--you want the solid stuff, not the stuff with the holes in it.) All I have used is 4" in diameter; it comes in 10" lengths you can hacksaw to fit. If you're carrying the swords, spears, etc. on an airline, they have a maximum weight of 50 lbs per package--and they will take long and large items--they carry guns and skis all the time.
You can tape together two or three, say, of these (shortened) PVC tubes and carry a fair amount of stuff (I use it for fishing rods and gear regularly.) You get caps and cement at the Home Depot, in the same department with the tubes. Cement one cap on each tube and tape the other on, so you can get it off. A shoulder strap helps to carry it. As an aside, some years ago, we published a book on Bowie knives. We wanted the photography to look uniform, so we had the guys send their knives to a central location. Most mailed them, wrapping them in cardboard, putting them in a PVC tube. All arrived in good shape, and went home the same way. |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 1,247
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I've also used the extendable poster tubes that you can get in an art store, at least for a slender straight sword like a jian. You can put foam or padding inside to cushion the sword so it doesn't rattle. The tube's length can also be adjusted to fit.
Poster carriers don't last all that long, but the huge advantage is that it doesn't look like you're carrying a weapon. There are certain jurisdictions where this is useful. Best, F |
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: PR, USA
Posts: 679
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You can cover the blades or scabbards with either insulation foam tubes, or even pool floating foam tubes. The tip should be protected via a plastic prescription vial with a quarter dollar coin on the inside, to prevent the tip from sticking through. You can pack foam bubbles inside the vial to make it more stable.
To carry the swords you can use a ""Sportube", a disposable USPS/FedEX triangular tube, or even a small golf-club carrier bag (Not the huge ones!). If you go to a martial arts store, they also sell sword shoulder carriers for iaido and kendo practitioners. G'luck! |
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