"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
using strapping for locking strips.. I have a good jewish friend who would even call this a really cheap
Quote from: jsheridan on August 01, 2012, 11:03:17 PMusing strapping for locking strips.. I have a good jewish friend who would even call this a really cheapAre you suggesting it is a bad/cheap idea or are you suggesting it is a good idea?Because the fact is, that is all newman locking strips are... re-purposed strapping material. Don Newman is a genius if for nothing else but by buying a 1000' spool for $50 bucks and selling 50' "rolls" for $70 bucks! Even if he sells the 50 foot roll for $50 bucks (to dealers)... he's making 20x markup! He takes that $50 bucks and makes a $1000 from it! That's a hell of ROI!
Quote from: Gilligan on August 02, 2012, 01:00:42 AMQuote from: jsheridan on August 01, 2012, 11:03:17 PMusing strapping for locking strips.. I have a good jewish friend who would even call this a really cheapAre you suggesting it is a bad/cheap idea or are you suggesting it is a good idea?Because the fact is, that is all newman locking strips are... re-purposed strapping material. Don Newman is a genius if for nothing else but by buying a 1000' spool for $50 bucks and selling 50' "rolls" for $70 bucks! Even if he sells the 50 foot roll for $50 bucks (to dealers)... he's making 20x markup! He takes that $50 bucks and makes a $1000 from it! That's a hell of ROI!It's a bad idea.. It's NOT re-purposed strapping.. it's a specifically engineered product with extremely high manufacturing tolerances and made from a special material to fend off the forces that are applied to it. If you have some real lock strip around, take your fingernail and find the groove along the edge, that my friends is the science behind the locking strip and why it will hold mesh at very high tension levels. the crap people come up with sometimes to save a buck in this business never surprises me.
It's a bad idea.. It's NOT re-purposed strapping.. it's a specifically engineered product with extremely high manufacturing tolerances and made from a special material to fend off the forces that are applied to it. If you have some real lock strip around, take your fingernail and find the groove along the edge, that my friends is the science behind the locking strip and why it will hold mesh at very high tension levels. the crap people come up with sometimes to save a buck in this business never surprises me.
Being as I'm a little more in with Newman than ya'll.. I can tell you for a fact it's not strapping material, it's specially manufactured at a single facility for the sole purpose of it's intended use. It's up to you to believe me or not, I for one know the difference.
Well don't forget that Don spends time making sure his products hold up to screen reclaim chemistry. Is the strapping material going to be resistant or is it going to get soft and maybe fail, taking many times it's cost in mesh with it? I think we're paying for that security when we buy the newman 'strapping' so to speak. Then again chem's in our industry have likely gotten milder in the last twenty years so maybe thats not the concern it once was.Newman products are also designed for ultra high tension. Ironically so, since so few go this route, but my point is that all the variables get multiplied exponentially when you make that jump from mid thirties to sixty+ n/cm. So it might be that newman sells 'strapping' that can handle this and ensures it's consistent. I'm sure that costs more than common strapping if thats the case. Just wanted to play devils advocate here.