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				 tyvek (long)
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
			
			Practical notes of this kind, are worth waiting for. 
Thanks
 
Brian W
 
On 27 Jun 2004 14:01:47 GMT,   (William R. 
Watt) wrote: 
 
// 
This tells how I made a 30 square foot sprit sail out of tyvek 
(tm Dow Chemical) house wrap. 
// 
Before making the sail I cut an 8.5 ft, 1.75x1.75 inch mast 
out of a used 12 foot spruce 2x4. The corners were roughly sawn 
off with the blade set at 45 degrees to make an 8-sided mast and 
then a 40 pound weight was suspended at the midpoint of the luff 
to measure the mast bend. (The weight is supposed to be 50 pounds 
but I had a 40 lb concrete block handy.) That's when the mast 
broke. My plan to cut around some nail holes in the wood had not 
worked out. I went to the public library, consulted Fred 
Bingham's book, made an 8-sided spar gauge according to his 
illustration, and cut a shorter mast out of an 8 foot spruce 2x4 
which had no nail holes in it, avoiding the larger knots. The 
mast has a 2 inch bend, the same as the 7.5 ft mast for the 
existing sail which was also cut from a spruce 2x4. 
// 
All of the descriptions of tyvek sails I found on the Internet 
used double-sided outdoor carpet tape to join the seams. 
// 
Cutting the tyvek was easy. The scissors did not have to be 
opened and closed, just pushed along the pencil line, cutting 
like a knife. Sewing the tyvek was a lot easier than sewing 
cloth. 
/// 
 Tyvek is very stiff. It makes a loud noise 
when it moves 
/// 
6. Someone wrote on the Internet that grommets do not hold up 
well in tyvek. One eighth braided nylon line was hand stitched 
along the edges of the corner reinforcements leaving a loop at 
the corners for tying on the sprit and mainsheet. The line was 
crossed over itself at the corner so the strain is directed along 
the line. 
 
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