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Posted

Whenever I add throat reinforcements, after I have located where exactly I want it and marked it, I glue the reinforcement piece to the main piece laying flat. Once the glue has dried, I then stitch the two together, while flat. I also line all of my holsters, so I do this before I put on the liner. I do not stitch the top of the reinforcement at this time. That will be stiched at the same time I stitch in the liner. I do it this way because it hides and protects the rest of the stitcing.

I bend the leather over after I have edged and burnished most of the leather.

Hope this helps.

Joey

www.RisingSunLeatherCo.com

(702) 371-3125

Posted

You might want to consider reducing significantly the thickness of the metal you are using for a reinforcement.

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Posted

Metal throat reinforcements must be glued to the leather reinforcement strip when it is flat (before the metal is bent). The assembly is then glued and stitched to the main body of the holster and it is sewn together flat. Once the inner and outer pieces are sewn to the reinforcement strap, the reinforcement strip is then bent into shape, and the holster is stitched into shape.

tk

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Posted

Metal throat reinforcements must be glued to the leather reinforcement strip when it is flat (before the metal is bent). The assembly is then glued and stitched to the main body of the holster and it is sewn together flat. Once the inner and outer pieces are sewn to the reinforcement strap, the reinforcement strip is then bent into shape, and the holster is stitched into shape.

tk

For those that are using metal reinforcement strips. What material and where are you getting it from? Steel or aluminium?

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Posted

Spring steel would be best IMO. Difficult to work with maybe, but it would certainly keep the mouth open.

Most aluminum alloys have a hard time bending without breaking.

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Posted

i have access to a metal shop that has every type of metal imaginable so does anyone know what i should be using exactly, I'm a decent sized guy and pretty strong and bending that around the pipe with 2 pair of pliers wasn't that bad how would i bend that after it is stitched in?

thanks everyone

Posted

i have access to a metal shop that has every type of metal imaginable so does anyone know what i should be using exactly, I'm a decent sized guy and pretty strong and bending that around the pipe with 2 pair of pliers wasn't that bad how would i bend that after it is stitched in?

thanks everyone

Several guys use the metal banding used for palletizing. I think that is about .020 thick. It doesn't have to be heavy as it only helps to keep the mouth of the holster open for reholstering and is really only useful on IWB designs not really needed on OWB although some folks do add it.

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Posted

Several guys use the metal banding used for palletizing. I think that is about .020 thick. It doesn't have to be heavy as it only helps to keep the mouth of the holster open for reholstering and is really only useful on IWB designs not really needed on OWB although some folks do add it.

I wonder if 3/4" .20mm thickness stainless from ULINE would work for throad reinforcements.

http://www.uline.com...Steel-Strapping

  • Members
Posted

Several guys use the metal banding used for palletizing. I think that is about .020 thick. It doesn't have to be heavy as it only helps to keep the mouth of the holster open for reholstering and is really only useful on IWB designs not really needed on OWB although some folks do add it.

That's what I use.

tk

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