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Posted

Personally, I prefer the corded ones because they are not only silent, but smooth. There is nothing quite like the sound of nunchaku whistling through the air without all that obnoxious chain noise and clunking.

 

It is easier to feel like the nunchaku is an extension of your arms when they are quiet and smooth. :up:

 

 

Ti-Kwon-Leap

"Annoying the ignorant since 1961"

Posted

If you plan to use it against another weapon, there are no advantages. Need chain for that. Not the cheap short linked chucks available on the mass market, but long 11+link chucks designed for fighting. The chucks nowadays are designed purely for show. That's why the chain or cord is so short.

 

Links, done right, don't bind up either. I've been doing nunchuks for about 15 years. I started with chain. I've dabbled in cord, and I still stick with chain.

 

IF, however, you're into competitions and the like, then cord is nicer. But for fighting, it's gotta be chain.

"I am enough of an artist to draw freely upon my imagination.

Imagination is more important than knowledge.

Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world." Einstein

Posted

The nunchaku that I have by my bedside are octagonal oak with a nylon cord (the cord being the width of the back of my hand.

 

The reason for this length is that you can trap and control an assailant's arm, leg or baseball bat without having to cross your arms.

 

However, if someone decides to give me the ol' surprise visit brandishing a samurai sword,

 

I guess I'll be wishing I had bought the autographed "Bruce Lee" chucks. :dead:

 

I suppose that 11+ links would come in handy for spanning the expanse of an attacker's fat skull... :wink:

 

 

Ti-Kwon-Leap

"Annoying the ignorant since 1961"

Posted

wow Ti-Kwon-Leap i have octaganal oak with nylon cord 'chucks by my bed to!!!! (well kinda under my pillow)

 

 

 

 

Posted

On 2002-06-27 03:26, Ti-Kwon-Leap wrote:

 

The nunchaku that I have by my bedside are octagonal oak with a nylon cord (the cord being the width of the back of my hand.

 

The reason for this length is that you can trap and control an assailant's arm, leg or baseball bat without having to cross your arms.

 

However, if someone decides to give me the ol' surprise visit brandishing a samurai sword,

 

I guess I'll be wishing I had bought the autographed "Bruce Lee" chucks. :dead:

 

I suppose that 11+ links would come in handy for spanning the expanse of an attacker's fat skull... :wink:

 

I have used nunchuks in a fight before. Those short cord chucks don't wrap around and allow you to grab anything. Not unless the assailant is just standing there letting you grab him.

 

You don't need to be attacked by a sword to appreciate chain links. A knife, or bat, or any weapon for that matter. A chain sure does a better job of joking your opponent or crushing bones in the hands/forearm. It also does wonders if your opponent gets his fingers locked up in them.

 

11-12 links is perfect, if you use the small links that come on commercially available nunchuks. The links should range from 7 1/2 to 9 inches. If you use larger links, 9 links total, or around seven visible.

 

Use anything less and you're setting yourself up for some mishaps. Sure, the chucks swing nice and everything with shorter links, but that's just a false sense of security. If you try to wrap a short cord/chain chuck around a baseball bat you'll have a hard time getting control over it (unless you wrap around the grip part) :wink:

 

Hey, then again, it all boils down to what you're going to do with the nunchuks. Demos and shows, display and fantasy a short cord/chain is fine. It doesn't really matter what length if that's what you do. If you think you'll use them in a fight you'll want the longer CHAIN. Try sparring against someone with a shinai, kali sticks, or any other distance weapon using a short cord and you'll quickly wish you had a longer cord. Imagine that fight real and you'll want chain without question.

 

If your opponent is unarmed, then it would be pretty pointless to try and trap their arm with the chuck instead of just hitting them.

 

Nunchuks are sold with a short cord/chain because it makes them easier to use in demonstrations. Traditional nunchuks, those used in battle, have always had longer chains. There is a reason for that. Think about it.

 

I suppose you can do what you want. I'm just giving the best advice I can from experience. Just trying to help.

 

 

"I am enough of an artist to draw freely upon my imagination.

Imagination is more important than knowledge.

Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world." Einstein

Posted
If i am not mistaken, Nunchaku are originally short corded. as they become the length of your arm and the nunchaku combined to create a very long range weapon. why would you want a silent pair of nunchaku in the first place? a pre-emptive attack would more than likely be from behind with a choak to the throat, where the short cord becomes effecive. the only weapon i can think of that is universal and very effective is the Bo, correct me if i am wrong, but after talking to some very respected Kobudo instructors over here in england, they all agree that nunchaku are originally short corded as they were used as a farming impliment. so why would they have a long cord?

He who controls the past commands the future,

He who controls the future, conquers the past

Posted

I have just come back from a date with a girl I will never see again, so I'm pretty disapointed (to an extent - shes french!!!!!). I arrive home to check out the weapons section only to find a very 'interesting' thread about nunchaku. I'll try to keep my anger to a minimum -after all, let's save the heated discussions for e-budo.com :wink:

 

I don't want to start an arguement (well, i do actually, I just can't be bothered), but it seems to me that you are talking about the modern version of nunchaku. Traditionally, metal was not available, so chord was used. To say that tradition nunchaku were designed with chain for combat is a laughing matter.

 

The chord is short for moves such as san kaku-jime. Try and wrap a long chain around a bandits neck (in the older days) and you would have been killed before you have it locked on!

 

May I ask when style of nunchaku you practice - japanese or okinawan (or do you just swing them about wildly) I know that you must practice either japanese or okinawan because the other countries didn't call them nunchaku.

 

You have confused me to no end, so please, shed some light on that ridiculous drivel you posted.

 

Cheers

 

 

"You Are Never Given A Dream Without Also Being Given The Power To Make It True. You May Have To Work For It, However"


Principal Kobudo Instructor & Owner

West Yorkshire Kobudo Academy

2nd Kyu (Matayoshi Okinawan Kobudo, IOKA UK)

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