Members Kristy Posted April 21, 2016 Members Report Posted April 21, 2016 Hi Everyone, I have recently started to learn how to make braided riding crops. The tutorials that I followed suggest hollow fiberglass cores, however the ones that I ordered I found were not "whippy" enough, if that makes sense. Before I even started I could tell there was barely any bend, the end result ended up being more like a hard, inflexible rod. The hollow fiberglass rods I ordered were 8mm outer diameter, 4mm inner diameter. Would someone please be able to suggest a core that would be suitable for this purpose that will have the appopriate amount of bend and flex? Thank you so much for your help with this. Cheers, Kristy Quote
Moderator immiketoo Posted April 21, 2016 Moderator Report Posted April 21, 2016 http://www.davidmorgan.com/index.php?cPath=7_11_291 What about this? Quote Learnleather.com
Members Kristy Posted April 21, 2016 Author Members Report Posted April 21, 2016 Thank you for your help! I did find these ones, but the cost works out at: $7/rod + $9 handling fee + $46.90 shipping to Australia making it much too expensive, and I haven't been able to find anything similar at all locally. Was more after the information if fiberglass was the type of core I should be looking at and if so what diameter thickness is appropriate. Quote
Moderator immiketoo Posted April 21, 2016 Moderator Report Posted April 21, 2016 I know NOTHING about those items other than they're used with horses. If it were me, I would spend the money and get the right stuff. Your typical dune buggy or bicycle flag rods aren't going to work well. The ones above are hollow and tapered which will make them more whippy at the end, stiffer near the handle. Quote Learnleather.com
Thor Posted April 21, 2016 Report Posted April 21, 2016 Mike, some riders believe they are needed to assist them in riding their horses as an aid. Jumpers use short ones of about 50 cm length and dressage riders of up to 1,10 to 1,30 m. Most of them are made from flexible fiberglass about the same quality of the older fiberglass arrows. In the older days the core was made from certain woods such as willow, hazelnut etc. Depending on the type of crop I'd expect that a carbonfiber core works just as well. Other than that... what materials are the fishing rods made from? Quote
Members Sonydaze Posted April 21, 2016 Members Report Posted April 21, 2016 You may want to try buying inexpensive stock whips or dressage whips and stripping them for the core? Quote http://www.bound2please.com Sewing machines: 3 - Sunstar 590BL, Artisan Toro 3200, Juki LK-1900HS, Juki DDL-8500-7, Juki DDL-5550N, Pfaff 138-6/21, Pfaff 546-H3, Pfaff 335-H3, Adler 221-76, Singer 144WVS33, Singer 29K-51, Siruba 747B
Members Kristy Posted April 22, 2016 Author Members Report Posted April 22, 2016 Thank you all for your answers - Thor, husband makes fishing rods on occasion and they have been carbon fibre, I think you may be on the right track, thank you. I've been asked to make them, and from what I now understand, Mike, these will not be used anywhere near a horse... Hence the person requesting it be more "whippy". Funnily enough, I would be more disturbed if I thought it was being used on a horse. Thank you, Sonnydaze, I think this is the way I might go for now, if they are happy with them I will investigate looking into other options. Thank you all again! Quote
Moderator Art Posted April 23, 2016 Moderator Report Posted April 23, 2016 For a riding crop, to be used with horses, I like something stiff, and the fiberglass works well. I use them primarily on horses that like to bite. When you are tightening up a saddle, sometimes the crafty buggers will try to bite you and a good still crop just stops them. You don't swing it at them, you just kind of poke them when they turn their head toward you, and you'll learn to do it right quick the first time one nips you. Now, for fetish apps, you can get get a couple of pieces out of a buggy whip, and they are pretty cheap from suppliers like Weaver and Bieler's. Don't know if you have a buggy crowd down your way, but that is where I would try first. Also they make different sizes of disciplinary canes that would work, and they are rather inexpensive (they can be outrageous too depending on where you buy). This topic is headed to the NSFW forum if it gets much more detailed. Art Quote For heaven's sakes pilgrim, make yourself a strop!
Members Kristy Posted April 25, 2016 Author Members Report Posted April 25, 2016 (edited) Thank you, Art - I wasn't aware that there was a NSFW forum on here, will head over there if I have any more questions - thank you. I can't imagine ever being close enough to a horse to swing anything at it, but will keep your tips in mind should that happen. I do have a duck that misbehaves, but she has me well trained. Edited April 25, 2016 by Kristy Quote
Moderator Art Posted April 25, 2016 Moderator Report Posted April 25, 2016 A crop is generally used to "poke" rather than "swing". Crops generally have a very stiff shaft as opposed to a quirt which is generally used with a little velocity. Art Quote For heaven's sakes pilgrim, make yourself a strop!
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