This is the place where the majority of the warbird (aircraft that have survived military service) discussions will take place. Specialized forums may be added in the new future
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Sun May 27, 2007 8:27 pm

Making mental note not to use Ober's pinking shears in his tool box.......ooppsss don't have to on current airplane though... :P :roll:

And I did try to find the answer to the rotary pinking cutting tool....much info but not the invention status.

JDK,,,I was surprised by that date also.....being a tomboy I never used them for sewing and only knew of their use on aircraft fabric. I suspect it took a while for aircraft people to see the benefits of using that which quilters/seamstresses already knew. Does that sound logical????

Sun May 27, 2007 8:44 pm

LadyO2Pilot wrote:JDK,,,I was surprised by that date also.....being a tomboy I never used them for sewing and only knew of their use on aircraft fabric. I suspect it took a while for aircraft people to see the benefits of using that which quilters/seamstresses already knew. Does that sound logical????


Given Ober's post, I'm surprised they've 'cottoned' on even now. :D But yes, it makes sense. I'm intrigued though. Will do some more digging. Or hunting needles.

Mon May 28, 2007 9:08 am

I may be way off on this one since A&P school was 20 years ago and I haven't done much dope and fabric work since, but didn't pinking tapes give more surface area for the tape to adhere to the fabric and a place for the tape to rip rather than pull all the fabric off? I want to say that there was a certain speed at witch if the aircraft could exceed that speed it had to have pinked tapes and fabric?

Steve
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