Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Great advice John and I was just about to say I just watched the shurloc ez frame video and well it looked ez. What are the disadvantages to the ez frame? One I noticed is that you can't adjust tension levels or at least as far as I can tell
I've got about 60 Shurloc EZ's and 80 newman rollers. About half of my newman rollers are FIRST batch, first generation but they work. They won't fit on the roller master but I'm pretty good at tensioning by hand. I really like the shurloc ez frame system, but they aren't as good as a newman m3 or even an mzx. They are light years better than static aluminums, but they are heavy and expensive. I certainly don't regret buying the ez's, but I think I'll keep my current inventory level the same and start putting S thread mesh in all of the shurlocs or other mesh counts that aren't capable of high tension. If a mesh manufacturer could make a mesh that didn't lose tension after the first stretching, then the ez's would really shine, but right now you can expect tension losses in the 15-20% after the initial panel install. One thing I've noticed is the mesh doesn't relax or drop as bad as it does on newman rollers for whatever reason. I don't know if shurloc works the mesh a little bit or what they do to keep the tension from falling really far but a 156 will be at about 40 newtons when first stretched then it will eventually stabilize around 33-36. The ez's are built very well, and they'll likely last longer than most shops will be in business.