duncan99210
Well-Known Member
I serviced a Seago raft. The straps holding the canister together used Velcro to secure the ends together. So you could make up fabric straps with a decent length of Velcro to fasten them together.
That is one of my questions also but if you consider the power of compressed air to lift trucks etc I suspect any kind of plastic banding would not be too strong.Huge thanks for your answer!
Given that a DIY guess of glue and breaking strain is out of the question it leaves two options:
1. Don't put a strap back on after you cut it off.
2. Create a new permeant link that joins the strap where you cut it (and leaves in place the original breaking section.
I guess superglue and similar plastic would work for (2).
What have others done?
Use to use those doing physics in grammmar tech when I was a lad 60 year’s agoHave you heard of reference masses ? The scales check out consistently OK, and other gas cylinders have weights near as dammit the same as when last checked and noted on the cylinders with Edding aircraft marker.
When I say there is one cylinder which has increased in weight, and I have identified a possible cause (external corrosion) I am left with the impression that either the odd cylinder is somehow linked to its own nano-sized black hole/singularity, or you are rushing to conclusions.
I use my lab balance
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That is one of my questions also but if you consider the power of compressed air to lift trucks etc I suspect any kind of plastic banding would not be too strong.
I would consider cutting the bands before I threw it over the side, if I was in any doubt...
Actually, it could be the end of the world - at least for the people needing to use it.The other point is that it's inconvenient if it doesent inflate as advertised but it's not the end of the world.
Much more likely to be a problem if you're not familiar with the contents and how they work.Actually, it could be the end of the world - at least for the people needing to use it.
Much more likely to be a problem if you're not familiar with the contents and how they work.
Not sure if this has been mentioned yet but the big advantage of self servicing is you get to see what's inside and become familiar with it. The other point is that it's inconvenient if it doesent inflate as advertised but it's not the end of the world. It's easy enough to pull the container apart and manually operate the cylinder. Even if this fails depending on the circumstances (probably not if your keel has detatched) you have a third chance as you may be able to inflate the raft with a pump.
cuum bag on the Seago is miles oversize, I cut off the end nearest the inflation trigger and then resealed it afterwards with duct tape. There is a nipple on the bag which I made a connection to fit my vacuum cleaner. It worked OKHow do people replace/reseal the vacuum bag and what material is the vacuum bag made from?
Rubble-sack?
You say you weighed your liferaft bottle on those? All 6 kilos of it? My recollection of them is that they were pretty delicate, and I question whether they would have dealt with that much weight.Have you heard of reference masses ? The scales check out consistently OK, and other gas cylinders have weights near as dammit the same as when last checked and noted on the cylinders with Edding aircraft marker.
When I say there is one cylinder which has increased in weight, and I have identified a possible cause (external corrosion) I am left with the impression that either the odd cylinder is somehow linked to its own nano-sized black hole/singularity, or you are rushing to conclusions.
I use my lab balance
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