I'm unlikely to use the Cordura and ballistic nylon myself. I can see that it may be preferred material for many uses on our MVs.
Are they materials that you have used Bulldogger? Do they work with adhesives? Could you make the axle boot to glue (a seam) on? Velcro?
Back to the soft top... I was thinking of cost savings that a single larger tarp would have, doubling it. I expect to be using sleeping mats for insulation. I read that some tarps that are treated heavily, can give off bad odors for a long time.
A heavy painters tarp is not treated or dyed, but I read, takes dies and treatments well and is the base canvas in the heavier weight that is treated for water resistance.
If I buy treated canvas with beeswax, can I glue the seams? That bothers me
I would rather purchase the dyed (OD) but untreated materials because I intend to rely on the glue. Two of the 8'x10' would do it.
Untreated materials can be died and painted (some), so this would be an opportunity to make it camo with reactive dies or rit, before the outer waterproof is applied, if one wants camo.
I've watched several videos of treating the (dyed and painted) canvas with beeswax, mixed with boiled linseed oil and turpentine and putting it on with a heat gun and iron. Do I want the inner liner to be treated canvas. Probably not.
How do adhesives/glues work with treated materials that have beeswax base if I started with treated materials? Can the treated canvas be glued, because it seems it should be glued before it is treated and the treating should mainly be on the outside.
I noticed there are colored, untreated tarps available. Two 8x10's are my next purchase, I guess. I bought some strapping 1", 1 1/2" and 2", for some reinforcement and D rings.
Are they materials that you have used Bulldogger? Do they work with adhesives? Could you make the axle boot to glue (a seam) on? Velcro?
Back to the soft top... I was thinking of cost savings that a single larger tarp would have, doubling it. I expect to be using sleeping mats for insulation. I read that some tarps that are treated heavily, can give off bad odors for a long time.
A heavy painters tarp is not treated or dyed, but I read, takes dies and treatments well and is the base canvas in the heavier weight that is treated for water resistance.
If I buy treated canvas with beeswax, can I glue the seams? That bothers me
I would rather purchase the dyed (OD) but untreated materials because I intend to rely on the glue. Two of the 8'x10' would do it.
Untreated materials can be died and painted (some), so this would be an opportunity to make it camo with reactive dies or rit, before the outer waterproof is applied, if one wants camo.
I've watched several videos of treating the (dyed and painted) canvas with beeswax, mixed with boiled linseed oil and turpentine and putting it on with a heat gun and iron. Do I want the inner liner to be treated canvas. Probably not.
How do adhesives/glues work with treated materials that have beeswax base if I started with treated materials? Can the treated canvas be glued, because it seems it should be glued before it is treated and the treating should mainly be on the outside.
I noticed there are colored, untreated tarps available. Two 8x10's are my next purchase, I guess. I bought some strapping 1", 1 1/2" and 2", for some reinforcement and D rings.