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The perfect storm..
On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 09:26:46 -0800, "Bill McKee"
wrote: "Loogypicker" wrote in message ... On Dec 22, 6:03 pm, "Bill McKee" wrote: "nom=de=plume" wrote in message ... "John H" wrote in message ... Thanks to all for the suggestions, especially Harry and the plum (try a sewing machine!). Comments appreciated. I found a shop that'll do the job. Now I'll let it dry out a bit and take it in. Again, thanks I guess you don't know how to use one. You should learn. -- Nom=de=Plume I can see you have never tried to sew the middle of a large canvas cover on a home sewing machine.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I have. When I built my hovercraft, I sewed all of the skirt myself. Most home machines do not have enough clearance to get a large heavy cover ripped in the middle in to the machine. Edges are fine, but not the center. My wife has a Bernina machine about 30 years old. Lots of power and will sew even naugahyde for the engine pad, but I had a rip in a cover a few years ago, and could not get the cover in enough to sew it. Mr. Kim, at an auto upholstery/boat cover shop will repair the large hole and a couple smaller ones for $45. Can't beat that with a stick. Harry had mentioned a hundred dollar shrink wrap guy. I'd love the phone number of that guy. The cheapest I've been able to find around here is $13.50/ft, measured from the tip to the bow to the back of the engine. -- Have a Super Christmas and a Spectacular New Year! John H |
The perfect storm..
Gene wrote:
On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 14:13:47 -0500, John H wrote: The cheapest I've been able to find around here is $13.50/ft, measured from the tip to the bow to the back of the engine. The materials (alone) are quite cheap..... http://www.boatshrink.com/ How much is the heat gun? |
The perfect storm..
Gene wrote:
On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 14:26:50 -0500, Jim wrote: Gene wrote: On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 14:13:47 -0500, John H wrote: The cheapest I've been able to find around here is $13.50/ft, measured from the tip to the bow to the back of the engine. The materials (alone) are quite cheap..... http://www.boatshrink.com/ How much is the heat gun? IIRC, it was about $300, though I've seen them priced at twice that much. I think a do-it-yourselfer could get by spending a LOT less.... Yup. I thought they were kind of pricy. Also, I shudder to think what a flame gun could do to a fiberglass boat in the hands of klutz. Harry for instance. |
The perfect storm..
On 12/23/09 4:20 PM, Gene wrote:
On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 16:09:27 -0500, wrote: Gene wrote: On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 14:26:50 -0500, wrote: Gene wrote: On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 14:13:47 -0500, John wrote: The cheapest I've been able to find around here is $13.50/ft, measured from the tip to the bow to the back of the engine. The materials (alone) are quite cheap..... http://www.boatshrink.com/ How much is the heat gun? IIRC, it was about $300, though I've seen them priced at twice that much. I think a do-it-yourselfer could get by spending a LOT less.... Yup. I thought they were kind of pricy. Also, I shudder to think what a flame gun could do to a fiberglass boat in the hands of klutz. Harry for instance. I believe my tool of choice would be an iron. That is the only accepted practice for fabric covering of aircraft where heat is used for taughtening the fabric.... The guy who does mine comes to your house or boatyard, whatever, and this year he raised his price from $7.50 to $8.00 a foot. He does a great job, even better than the dealer I used to use. Most of the boatyards/dealers charge $13 to $15 a foot. I see flajim has made another of his idiotic, uninformed posts. He should stick to spoofing the ID's of other posters here. |
The perfect storm..
"Gene" wrote in message ... On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 16:09:27 -0500, Jim wrote: Gene wrote: On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 14:26:50 -0500, Jim wrote: Gene wrote: On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 14:13:47 -0500, John H wrote: The cheapest I've been able to find around here is $13.50/ft, measured from the tip to the bow to the back of the engine. The materials (alone) are quite cheap..... http://www.boatshrink.com/ How much is the heat gun? IIRC, it was about $300, though I've seen them priced at twice that much. I think a do-it-yourselfer could get by spending a LOT less.... Yup. I thought they were kind of pricy. Also, I shudder to think what a flame gun could do to a fiberglass boat in the hands of klutz. Harry for instance. I believe my tool of choice would be an iron. That is the only accepted practice for fabric covering of aircraft where heat is used for taughtening the fabric.... -- It is usually futile to try to talk facts and analysis to people who are enjoying a sense of moral superiority in their ignorance. -Thomas Sowell Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC. Homepage http://pamandgene.tranquilrefuge.net/boating/the_boat/my_boat.htm Forté Agent 6.00 Build 1186\ An iron may stick to the plastic. I have a Black and Decker heat gun from the 1980's. Blows lot of heat. Here is a dual temp gun $32. http://www.amazon.com/Black-Decker-9.../dp/B0000302U8 |
The perfect storm..
On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 14:43:30 -0500, Gene
wrote: On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 14:26:50 -0500, Jim wrote: Gene wrote: On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 14:13:47 -0500, John H wrote: The cheapest I've been able to find around here is $13.50/ft, measured from the tip to the bow to the back of the engine. The materials (alone) are quite cheap..... http://www.boatshrink.com/ How much is the heat gun? IIRC, it was about $300, though I've seen them priced at twice that much. I think a do-it-yourselfer could get by spending a LOT less.... Well, I notice Harry hasn't posted anything about his hundred dollar guy. Must've been more BS. I don't think I want to try the shrink wrap trick myself. We don't normally get a snow like we had - the last time was 1996 - so I don't think I'll invest in the shrink wrap stuff. -- Have a Super Christmas and a Spectacular New Year! John H |
The perfect storm..
nom=de=plume wrote:
"John wrote in message ... Thanks to all for the suggestions, especially Harry and the plum (try a sewing machine!). Comments appreciated. I found a shop that'll do the job. Now I'll let it dry out a bit and take it in. Again, thanks I guess you don't know how to use one. You should learn. Do you really think an average Singer sewing machine is capable of working with that material? Think again - I've been to the canvas shop. You put a lot of confidence in the average. |
The perfect storm..
nom=de=plume wrote:
"Bill wrote in message m... wrote in message ... "John wrote in message ... Thanks to all for the suggestions, especially Harry and the plum (try a sewing machine!). Comments appreciated. I found a shop that'll do the job. Now I'll let it dry out a bit and take it in. Again, thanks I guess you don't know how to use one. You should learn. -- Nom=de=Plume I can see you have never tried to sew the middle of a large canvas cover on a home sewing machine. Please show me where I said either a home sewing machine or to do it himself. I said, try a sewing machine. Lots of people do this for a living. Find one. Keep trying. I've heard that if a monkey is left alone long enough with a typewriter.... No insult intended of course.. Read this post again - top to bottom. You contradict yourself - again. If you don't have anything of substance to add, it is perfectly OK to STFU. |
The perfect storm..
John H wrote:
On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 15:03:50 -0800, "Bill McKee" wrote: wrote in message ... "John wrote in message ... Thanks to all for the suggestions, especially Harry and the plum (try a sewing machine!). Comments appreciated. I found a shop that'll do the job. Now I'll let it dry out a bit and take it in. Again, thanks I guess you don't know how to use one. You should learn. -- Nom=de=Plume I can see you have never tried to sew the middle of a large canvas cover on a home sewing machine. Oh hell, she probably throws the 10' x 25' piece of canvas right up there on her Janome 9500 and lets fly. She's 'pretty smart', you know. In her mind. |
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