
The name is a true story.
Between the 9th and 11th centuries, a small number of blades were inscribed +VLFBERHT+. They were made of crucible steel so pure that the rest of Europe could not reproduce it for the better part of a thousand years.
It was not luck. It was metallurgy — knowing precisely what the steel had to withstand, and refusing the impurities that made everything else fail sooner.
Ulfberht carries that standard into protection: rust preventers, anti-seize and galvanic defence for the surfaces and interfaces that salt, water and time would otherwise claim. Quiet work, done properly, so the gear outlasts the conditions it lives in.
