Hail and welcome! Perhaps you can answer the age-old question of "does the toilet water drain in the opposite direction down under"?
And huzzah for the mid 16th century!!
Yes the toilet water does drain in the opposite direction down here however to sustain this phenomenon we are required to offer daily sacrifices to the Mad Laughing Kookabarru Prime Minister. It's cruel and unusual but it's the only way.
Also huzzah for I have found someone who also likes the mid 16th century! It's astonishing for me when I see how little this period is appreciated around here. The farthest the heavy fighters go is late 15th century and everything after that becomes hazy. I've even been told by another SCA member that a sallet + bevor combo was the primary style of head protection for 16th century knights and nobles until the burgonet 'replaced' everything. Bah, one day I'll shall show them the glory of the mid 16th century! Until then, I shall remain silent and listen to such informative comments from my local SCA members such as "the armet was only used for jousting", "the close helm never existed" and "late 14th century knights never had plate armour".
Ha now I'm starting to sound like a terrible whinger but I know they mean well. I know I sounded like a buffoon when I was younger and uninformed so I shouldn't be too hard on them.
I don't get it...aren't they in SCA to be historically accurate?
By far a loaded question, but as a general rule in almost any subject and any person... depends on who and what you ask. Ask a 13th century historian about 16th century, or vice versa, and they may be fuzzy or wrong on some things. Always good to get multiple thoughts/opinions, and when they all sound strange, try for some outside validation from a proper historical source if no one can cite at least a couple examples.
I mean, we have plenty of close helmets in a number of museums, not just a single one that might be a victorian or modern butchering of original pieces hobbled together. If they had said early period helms that we have artwork but no surviving examples of didn't exist and were artistic liberties, at least that could be *somewhat* of a possibility of being correct.
If in doubt, ask some European living history guys. Or us.