Members rmr Posted November 28, 2015 Members Report Posted November 28, 2015 I have heard that some burn/melt/cut their nylon thread instead of just cutting it- one to prevent it from freeing and two to keep the stitch from undoing itself. Are there better tools than others for this purpose- and or can you direct me to where I may find one Thasnk you RMR Quote
Members TinkerTailor Posted November 28, 2015 Members Report Posted November 28, 2015 soldering iron. Quote
Members CrazedLemming Posted November 28, 2015 Members Report Posted November 28, 2015 (edited) I just use a butane lighter, but there are things like these little burning tools that might work. Fishing line cutter: http://www.amazon.com/Berkley-BTHLC-Hot-Line-Cutter/dp/B004DIH2DS Bead/Jewelry cord cutter: http://www.amazon.com/BeadSmith-Cordless-Thread-Zapper-Burner/dp/B001HBXOUY Edited November 28, 2015 by CrazedLemming Quote
Chief31794 Posted November 28, 2015 Report Posted November 28, 2015 I use a "Thread Zapper II" it works great on sewing thread, is very cheap on Ebay, mine has lasted for 2 years no battery change yet, uses 1 AA cell. I posted a link to one ebay source there are litterally dozens. http://www.ebay.com/itm/Beadsmith-Thread-Zap-II-Burner-Zapper-Tool-or-2-Replacement-Tips-/400931487097?var=&hash=item5d5960fd79:m:mjMz73kheT0A_x70PjWYjcA Chief Quote
Members rmr Posted November 28, 2015 Author Members Report Posted November 28, 2015 thank you all for the sources. I guess I should have asked this in the original post- will these gadgets cut nylon thread in the 207-277 size?? and do they provide good security where the thread is cut from pulling back through the hole? Thanks RMR Quote
Chief31794 Posted November 28, 2015 Report Posted November 28, 2015 That's what I use the one I have for and it works really well. I sew all 277. Chief Quote
Moderator Art Posted November 29, 2015 Moderator Report Posted November 29, 2015 After you melt through the thread with whatever, press it down onto the stitched thread, it will adhere there if it is still still in a melted state. Art Quote
Members OLDNSLOW Posted November 29, 2015 Members Report Posted November 29, 2015 being this is still a fresh comment and along the same line, I am looing for a good source for the webbing to make tactical belts with, have found a few but am wondering if there are others? Thanks in advance. Quote
Members CrazedLemming Posted December 13, 2015 Members Report Posted December 13, 2015 I just wanted to add that I've been using the electric Berkley fishing line cutter for a couple weeks now. It works great for synthetic threads. I use it to cut things up to the size of tandy's braided thread (roughly 1.2mm) without any problem. Smaller threads like 0.8mm tiger thread are like butter. I might get another to add to my tackle box. Quote
Members 25b Posted December 14, 2015 Members Report Posted December 14, 2015 being this is still a fresh comment and along the same line, I am looing for a good source for the webbing to make tactical belts with, have found a few but am wondering if there are others? Thanks in advance. Which ones have you found? Quote
Members TinkerTailor Posted December 14, 2015 Members Report Posted December 14, 2015 I use hudson4supplies.com being this is still a fresh comment and along the same line, I am looing for a good source for the webbing to make tactical belts with, have found a few but am wondering if there are others? Thanks in advance. Quote
Members OLDNSLOW Posted December 14, 2015 Members Report Posted December 14, 2015 country brook designs, strapworks, theecwcorp, Fairview country sales, I have bought from Fairview but they don't have all the colors that I would like to be able to buy. Quote
Members OLDNSLOW Posted December 14, 2015 Members Report Posted December 14, 2015 I want to start making tactical belts with cobra buckles, and need to find some of the current colors that would qualify as mil spec. I want to do the double thick with a Velcro liner, I think I have looked at so many that I have lost track of what I have looked at. Quote
Members 25b Posted December 14, 2015 Members Report Posted December 14, 2015 I think I have looked at so many that I have lost track of what I have looked at. Oh. Ok, well good luck with that then. Quote
Moderator Art Posted December 14, 2015 Moderator Report Posted December 14, 2015 I am declaring the highjacking over, lets get back to thread burners. I use a Bovie, I think it is High Temp. I also have a fishing line burner and it also gets red or more hot and works well. Can't say I get very good battery life on any of them. I have tried a Burny (blowtorch style butane lighter) which works but you have practice with it; the Berkley/Bovie just is kind of intuitive. Art Quote
Members dikman Posted December 17, 2015 Members Report Posted December 17, 2015 I'm with TinkerTailor and use a soldering iron with a fine tip. That way I don't have to worry about the flame getting where it shouldn't, it gives very precise control and it's possible to fuse the end to the adjacent thread (if you're careful). Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.