Palakol wrote:
^ Not really. I get what you're saying, but like I said it's not a stick. Nor is it a baseball bat or a CD. The physics are totally different. The force has to be applied to the chain, which multiplies the kinetic energy of the striking side, in the same principle as a flail or a blackjack or a sock filled with dead batteries. Especially with heavier metal ones, the pressure tends to decrease the closer you are to the edge (like when you are using a sword you hold it near the hilt, not by the edge of the handle), therefore applying less force for the chain to multiply. With this weapon it's more about the velocity, as it doesn't have much mass to begin with. And you lose the wrist flick when you hold it too far down and you end up just clubbing someone with it.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-H0OKsBamo4[/youtube]
You're not supposed to use your wrists in the first place... They're supposed to be locked. No, it's not a baseball bat or a CD, but the same concepts still apply. It's not like the laws of physics change because you're using nunchaku.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lg_ILTyfjyc[/youtube]
How are you supposed to block or trap anything if you hold them right next to the chain or cord?
The man in these videos is actually from Okinawa, and he was taught and teaches the same traditional style that originated there.
Also, with a sword, the hilt isn't usually located close to the halfway point of the sword's total length. That, and you don't HIT with a sword, you CUT with it. You don't choke up and hold a flail right next to the chain either.