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William R. Watt June 12th 04 01:01 PM

tyvek sail?
 
contemplating making a sail for a small home made boat out of some leftover
Tyvek house wrap. there are instrctuions on the Internet fo rmakign this
type of sail with double-sided carpet tape but can't find any follow up
info on longevity, durability, or performance. any info appreciated. has
anyone tried sewing a Tyvek sail on a sewing machine? is there way way of
removing the advertizing?

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Lorence M June 13th 04 10:48 PM

tyvek sail?
 
William R. Watt wrote:
contemplating making a sail for a small home made boat out of some leftover
Tyvek house wrap. there are instrctuions on the Internet fo rmakign this
type of sail with double-sided carpet tape but can't find any follow up
info on longevity, durability, or performance. any info appreciated. has
anyone tried sewing a Tyvek sail on a sewing machine? is there way way of
removing the advertizing?



Use the red "Tuc-Tape" that's used on construction sites.
Sticks to anything and will give your sails that look of the side
of an unfinished house. :)

Tyvek begins showing signs of deterioration in just a few weeks
of exposure to weather. It doesn't like being crunched up.

May make a cheap sail, you get what you pay for.


Rich Hampel June 14th 04 05:07 AM

tyvek sail?
 
Tyvek is too air permeable for use as a sail. The function of Tyvek is
to allow air to permeate THROUGH the fabric .... and thats why its a
BAD choice for sail material. Its not UV protectect and will oxidize
badly and degrade in the presence of sunlight. Other than when being
applied to the side of a house, when was the first time that you saw
exposed Tyvek on a house .... good reason that you dont as it degrades
quickly when exposed to sunlight (UV).

Go to www.sailrite.com and choose a lightweight & cheap dacron
sailcloth material. BTW.... they also sell sail kits .... already
cut, ****properly broadseamed*** .... just assemble with two sided
sailmakers seam tape, sew together on a homemakers sewing machine and
sail away. Approximately 1/2 or less than a 'store bought' sail (made
by indentured slave-wage workers in the orient). There are a few kit
sail builders on the internet. Why go to all the work of making your
own boat then hoisting poorly cut / inefficient 'crap' to move her?
The sails are just as important as the care that you took when making
the boat.
;-)

Scott Vernon June 14th 04 06:13 PM

tyvek sail?
 
You can make a sail out of plastic tarp material. The blue stuff you see
everywhere. You can sew it. Should last a season. Will deteriorate if
left in the sun very long. Years back, there was an article about a guy who
sailed from NE to Fla. with just such 'sails'.


Scott Vernon
Plowville PA __/)__/)__

"William R. Watt" wrote in message
...
contemplating making a sail for a small home made boat out of some

leftover
Tyvek house wrap. there are instrctuions on the Internet fo rmakign this
type of sail with double-sided carpet tape but can't find any follow up
info on longevity, durability, or performance. any info appreciated. has
anyone tried sewing a Tyvek sail on a sewing machine? is there way way of
removing the advertizing?

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William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community

network
homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm
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Earl Colby Pottinger June 14th 04 10:07 PM

tyvek sail?
 
"Scott Vernon" :

You can make a sail out of plastic tarp material. The blue stuff you see
everywhere. You can sew it. Should last a season. Will deteriorate if
left in the sun very long. Years back, there was an article about a guy

who
sailed from NE to Fla. with just such 'sails'.


Check out http://www.friend.ly.net/~dadadata/oddsails.html

Earl Colby Pottinger

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William R. Watt June 15th 04 01:56 PM

tyvek sail?
 
thanks for the replies.

This is a replacment sail for an exsisting boat
(www.ncf.ca/~ag384/DogSkiff.htm). I
thought I'd try tyvek because I have some on hand.

Really not interested in doing what everybody else does, ie dacron. The
exsisting sail is nylon double thick with one layer aligned on the bias to
eliminate stretch. Worked great. Sail is 5 years old. The tyvek is not as
light as the nylon but moreso than polytarp. The air permiability could be
a problem. Hadn't considered that. I have actually seen Tyvek exposed on
unfinished buildings for over year. Good advertising I suppose. Print
doesn't degrade. :) Almost all my effort is in the longer mast to try a
larger sail on the boat, not in the tyvek sail itself. (First mast broke
during bend test. Starting on second.) For the sail plan I used the info
on sprit sails I gathered and put on my website (under Boats) for anyone
insterested in making a sprit sail.



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