Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
In Response To: Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking (Charlie)
I read somewhere that Nylon would typically stretch 300% before it broke and that is what a hole is, a break in the threads. I have the 12 oz on my one of boats and I am not the least bit worried. If I were to damage it, I just patch and reskin.
Messages In This Thread
- Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
Kudzu -- 12/25/2009, 7:12 pm- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
Scott Shurlow -- 12/27/2009, 10:16 am- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
Kudzu -- 12/27/2009, 10:40 am
- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
Brian Nystrom -- 12/25/2009, 9:39 pm- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
Kudzu -- 12/26/2009, 11:09 am- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
Chuck Gandy -- 12/26/2009, 3:35 pm- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
Charlie -- 12/26/2009, 4:23 pm- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
Kudzu -- 12/27/2009, 10:39 am- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
brian scarborough -- 12/27/2009, 10:02 am- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
Charlie -- 12/27/2009, 11:17 am- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
brian scarborough -- 12/27/2009, 7:13 pm- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
Kudzu -- 12/27/2009, 8:17 pm
- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking
- Re: Skin-on-Frame: Designing for low tracking