trampoline netting - Wharram Builders and Friends2024-03-29T07:18:19Zhttp://wharrambuilders.ning.com/forum/topics/trampoline-netting?groupUrl=tiki26&commentId=2195841%3AComment%3A70862&x=1&feed=yes&xn_auth=noI would recommend lacing your…tag:wharrambuilders.ning.com,2012-03-28:2195841:Comment:708622012-03-28T21:45:52.938Zboatsmithhttp://wharrambuilders.ning.com/profile/qe0j3ojqb10
<p>I would recommend lacing your tramps on with multiple lines per side. Then if one part fails it is less likely to be catastrophic.</p>
<p>I would recommend lacing your tramps on with multiple lines per side. Then if one part fails it is less likely to be catastrophic.</p> I used poly pipe (electrical…tag:wharrambuilders.ning.com,2012-03-28:2195841:Comment:707662012-03-28T19:22:07.264ZRobert Hugheshttp://wharrambuilders.ning.com/profile/RobertHughes
<p>I used poly pipe (electrical conduit) fed through the edge of the netting, then I tied the pipes to the beams & hulls with the sort of lashing you'd use to fix a sail to a yard. It avoids any problems with chafe damaging the netting. The mistake I made was getting the net made too big. They stretch quite a lot over a couple of months so now I'll have to get mine cut down a bit... Bear in mind where netting is concerned everything moves so chafe is the big enemy.…</p>
<p>I used poly pipe (electrical conduit) fed through the edge of the netting, then I tied the pipes to the beams & hulls with the sort of lashing you'd use to fix a sail to a yard. It avoids any problems with chafe damaging the netting. The mistake I made was getting the net made too big. They stretch quite a lot over a couple of months so now I'll have to get mine cut down a bit... Bear in mind where netting is concerned everything moves so chafe is the big enemy.<a href="http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/1930086000?profile=original" target="_self"><img src="http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/1930086000?profile=original" width="600" class="align-center"/></a></p>