1533 Duel between a French knight and a Spanish knight
From “Jousting in Medieval and Renaissance Iberia”, Noel Fallows, P. 264
The following description by Diego Garcia de Paredes of a single combat in the city of Ravenna in 1533:
“In this battle a French Captain turned to face me because I killed two of his brothers on the battlefield, and we fought in the middle of the two camps armed as men at arms with some iron maces that I brought out. The Frenchman, seeing the weight of them, threw his (mace) to the ground, being unable to wield it well, and seized hold of an estoc and lunged at me, thinking that I would not be able to wield the mace either. He stabbed me through the tasset and wounded me, and I then struck him on the armet with the mace and I sank it into his head, from which he fell down dead.”
In other words, neither of them seems to have put any dice into defence. The Frenchman pierced armour with an estoc, rolling a regular hit. The Spanish knight however rolled a crit, and ended the fight.
To further differentiate damage types, perhaps Bludgeoning can never bypass but only takes half DR from any armour?