Rope dart

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The rope dart or rope javelin(Chinese: 繩鏢; pinyin: shěng biāo; Wade-Giles: ?) is one of the flexible, also known as soft, weapons in Chinese martial arts. Other flexible weapons in this family include the meteor hammer, flying claw, and chain whip. Although the flexible weapons share similar movements, each weapon has its own specific techniques.

The rope dart is basically a long rope (usually 14' - 16') with a metal dart attached to one end. This was a weapon from ancient times, which allows the user to throw the dart out at a long range target and use the rope to pull it back. The rope dart can be used for twining, binding, circling, hitting, piercing, tightening, and other techniques.

Rope dart play consists of twining, shooting, and retrieval. Twining and shooting can be done from any joint such as foot, knee, elbow, and neck. The rope is anchored on the left hand and played primarily with the right hand.

Skillful use of the rope dart can easily trick an opponent because the dart can shoot out very suddenly.

Just like the chain whip, excellent hand-eye coordination is a must for the practitioner to do this weapon well. In some Wushu training regimens, the chain whip and Changquan are prerequisites for learning the rope dart.

A variation of this weapon is the meteor hammer, which has a blunt weight on the end of the rope. It was used in a similar fashion to the rope dart, and many of the techniques are the same. The blunt shape of the meteor ball will deal concussive damage rather than piercing.

Contents

[edit] Construction

The rope dart is constructed from 5 parts:

  • dart
  • rings
  • rope
  • flags
  • handle

The dart is made of a hard material, usually iron or steel. It can be of variable weight depending on the users preference, and can be variable in shape (conical, triangular prism, pentangular prism).

The rings (usually 4 or 5) are attached to the dart head.

The rope is attached to the final ring. Traditionally, the rope was constructed from Chinese rope and covered with wax to minimize friction. The rope is often times made of a softer synthetic material and covered with talc powder or some other substance to reduce friction.

There is at least one flag attached near, or onto the dart head itself to conceal the dart during play. Additional flags can be attached to the side rings to slow down the dart and increase control.

The handle is made from the last piece of rope.

[edit] Media

[edit] Rope Darts in Popular Culture

  • In Heroes of the East (1978), Gordon Liu's character uses a rope dart against a Ninja.
  • In Shanghai Noon (2000), Jackie Chan's character Chon Wang fashions a blunt rope dart with a horseshoe and a length of rope.
  • In Romeo Must Die (2000), Jet Li's character uses a fire hose as a blunt rope dart. The main character does something similar in the movie The Transporter 2.
  • In 2000's Scooby-Doo film, the character of Fred was shown experimenting with rope dart techniques.
  • The characters Scorpion, and Smoke from the Mortal Kombat series of video games uses a rope dart in a special attack that impales and drags his opponents closer for a melee attack. In Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks, Scorpion also uses this weapon like a more traditional rope dart.
  • In Once Upon a Time in China (1991), Yee Kwan Yan's character has a blade tied to the end of his braid, making it like a rope dart.
  • In Five Masters of Death, one of the villains uses a variation of the rope dart, which consists of a rope with an ax head at the end.
  • In Martial Arts of Shaolin one of the villains is seen briefly using a rope dart during the final assault on the boat.
  • In the King of Fighters XI, Shion, the sub-boss, attacks with a rope dart among many other weapons.
  • In Kill Bill: Vol 1, Go-Go uses a whip chain like a rope dart.

[edit] References

Li, Keqin, Li Xingdong (1996). Soft Weapons -- Nine-Section Whip and Rope Dart. Beijing: Foreign Languages Press. ISBN 7-119-01883-3.