On Wed, 2010-12-01 at 18:00 +0000, andy pugh wrote: > On 1 December 2010 17:48, Jon Elson <el...@pico-systems.com> wrote: > > > Lacing tape was wax-coated, > > It still is: > http://uk.rs-online.com/web/search/searchBrowseAction.html?method=retrieveTfg&binCount=29&Nty=1&Ntx=mode%2bmatchallpartial&Ntk=I18NAll&Ne=4294957561&Nr=AND%28avl%3auk%2csearchDiscon_uk%3aN%29&N=4294957343&Ntt=lacing
For those in the US of A, mabey try: http://www.tecratools.com/product1243.html http://www.tecratools.com/pages/tecalert/cable_lacing.html I can see how the knots can be tied, but I would think that one would want to tie them without running the whole string through each knot loop. In other words, it would be nice to tie an anchor knot at one cable end, then quickly tie the intermediate knots with the spool attached, then cut the spool off at the other end, tie off and trim. Some of these spools are around 500 or 1000 feet so does one need to load a smaller spool? Does anyone have a way-back machine I can borrow, so I can see someone actually do some real lacing? -- Kirk Wallace http://www.wallacecompany.com/machine_shop/ http://www.wallacecompany.com/E45/index.html California, USA ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Increase Visibility of Your 3D Game App & Earn a Chance To Win $500! Tap into the largest installed PC base & get more eyes on your game by optimizing for Intel(R) Graphics Technology. Get started today with the Intel(R) Software Partner Program. Five $500 cash prizes are up for grabs. http://p.sf.net/sfu/intelisp-dev2dev _______________________________________________ Emc-users mailing list Emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users