Members plinkercases Posted April 10, 2020 Members Report Posted April 10, 2020 folks, I have a customer with a torn fender leg.... She is in training and needs to back in the saddle quickly and cost effectively so I an contemplating as an emergency fix to glue new skirting leather front and back of the tear (make a sandwich) and stitch vertically only on the front and back edges. ..skive the splice of the riders leg side around the edges to help prevent too much rubbing perhaps..... Thought's from the pro's? Quote
Members blue62 Posted April 10, 2020 Members Report Posted April 10, 2020 (edited) From what I can see in that picture it looks like the stirrup leather and the fender is made as one piece, so the splice would take the riders full weight, I wouldn't splice it, to much of a chance of a failure next to the splice, I'd replace the stirrup leathers and install new fenders as a separate piece., Generally one piece stirrup leather/fender is done as a cost saving measure. Also it looks like the leather has seen better days. Might be time for a upgrade. Edited April 10, 2020 by blue62 Spelling, added info Quote
Members BigSiouxSaddlery Posted April 10, 2020 Members Report Posted April 10, 2020 If it's just a plain fender, and it isn't important to the customer to keep the original to match the saddle, as in the case of a tooled saddle, I rarely repair a fender. It doesn't really cost any more to replace it with a new plain fender than it does to fiddle around patching it. It is difficult to get a patch completely bulk free and as flexible as a fender without a patch. The same goes for stirrup leathers. . . 999 times out of a thousand, I will not splice or patch a stirrup leather. It looks like half leathers were used on this saddle, which is exactly why I'm not a fan of them. All the strain is borne by the fender, and eventually most of them will fail. Quote
Members Goldshot Ron Posted April 11, 2020 Members Report Posted April 11, 2020 I don't have anything to offer, but, what piece are you holding? It looks like the stirrup end of the fender. Or, is it the top part of the fender, and the leathers are actually cut inline with the fender so there is no connection between the two, just one piece fender going into the stirrup leathers. I just can't see from your photo. Just wondering, Ron. Quote
Members plinkercases Posted April 24, 2020 Author Members Report Posted April 24, 2020 Thanks all and yes it was one piece fender and stirrup leather. At any rate they took it somewhere else so I am not sure what has happened to it. But now I know for next time. Thanks all and stay safe. Quote
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