We’ve all been there, you get on the strip, ready to fence, but your weapon isn’t. It’s an instant yellow card penalty, and can be distracting if you don’t know what happens next.
If you get on the strip and your weapon or body cord fails, know that it will be confiscated for the duration of the bout. Calmly get your second one and hook up and fence. Once you are done fencing that bout, collect the broken item to see if you can repair it before you fence again.
Here are some common issue and easy fixes.
Weapon failed weight – This is one of the most common problems. An easy strip side fix is to take the tip out (making sure you don’t lose any screws) and pull out the weight bearing spring. Gently stretch the spring and reassemble the point. If you get a chance, have a club mate test this before you present it again, while it works 80% or the time, there is a chance it won’t.
Missing screws. More common in epee than foil, also an easy fix, just replace the screws before you fence again.
Weapon is intermittantly off-target – This could be a lose barrel. Remove the tape at the tip and tighten the barrel. Then replace the tape. If this doesn’t fix it, there could be a bad wire. Rewiring a blade cannot be done between bouts. Find a new back-up weapon for the day.
Weapon is always off target – There is one easy fix, check the wire at the socket. If it’s broken of there and you have enough slack to reconnect it, do so. If you don’t see anything wrong, your blade will likely need to be completely rewired.
Bodycord issues – Usually when a body cord goes, it’s internal and not something you want to try and take apart between bouts. But occassionally the only problen is that the spring on the sides of the prongs get too compressed and occasionally float in the socket and lose connection causing a white light. If this is a case, you can use a small screw driver to gently pull out the springs.
There are several other things that will happen, blades will break, or your fix won’t be something easy to fix. For those return the item to your bag, tag it broken so you don’t grab it by mistake later, and find a third blade/bodycord to be your backup. This is where traveling with club mates can be helpful.
And before you start fencing, test all your equipment, sure it worked the night before, but it’s been in the cold and compressed in your bag since then. Don’t count on it working tournement day.