#203388 - 06/13/10 08:33 PM
Re: A couple of recent paracord handle wraps
[Re: chickenlittle]
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Veteran
Registered: 10/14/08
Posts: 1517
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A paracord wrapped handle improves your grip when you are sweating and in the rain. It is also a good way to carry extra cordage without taking up space. As far as bacteria, if that is your greatest worry, you are worried about the wrong things. If you need to, just let them set in direct sunlight when you are able. It will kill most of it.
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#203389 - 06/13/10 08:39 PM
Re: A couple of recent paracord handle wraps
[Re: gonewiththewind]
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Addict
Registered: 10/21/05
Posts: 442
Loc: NH
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A paracord wrapped handle improves your grip when you are sweating and in the rain. It is also a good way to carry extra cordage without taking up space. As far as bacteria, if that is your greatest worry, you are worried about the wrong things. If you need to, just let them set in direct sunlight when you are able. It will kill most of it. thanks montanero. also, thinking about it paracord is synthetic; and dries very quickly. there is just nothing on which micro-organisms can grow.
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#203391 - 06/13/10 09:54 PM
Re: A couple of recent paracord handle wraps
[Re: kevingg]
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Pooh-Bah
Registered: 09/01/07
Posts: 2432
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Wrapping cord around tool handles is a good way of improving their grip. It needn't be para-cord, any synthetic cord with the right characteristics will work. Polyester and nylon are good. Polypropylene, very prone to abrasion and UV damage, and Dyneema, tough as iron but slippery, not so much. Any middling two to five millimeter utility cord will serve. For smaller tools braided mason line can work well.
In Florida, land of heat and humidity, cord wrapping handles can improve comfort and function. But you also have to be careful. If the tool handle is prone to rust cord wrapping can hold salty sweat against the vulnerable steel and cause corrosion.
Also, IMHO, handle wrapping is not a particularly attractive way of carrying cordage. Yes, it means you have some cord, assuming you haven't lost the hatchet, but so would stuffing a hank of line in your pants or jacket pocket. And a hank in your pocket doesn't require it to be unwoven before use and, an important point in my book, the stuff in your pocket hasn't been riding exposed to the sunlight and the sort of physical abuse hatchets and such tools get.
Having some light line at hand is good. But it is better if you can break it out quickly and if it isn't half worn through or weak from UV damage.
A thirty foot hank of light line tends to disappear if you coil it loosely.
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#203393 - 06/13/10 11:42 PM
Re: A couple of recent paracord handle wraps
[Re: chickenlittle]
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Stranger
Registered: 03/16/07
Posts: 22
Loc: Fl, Gulf Coast
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#203548 - 06/17/10 04:41 AM
Re: A couple of recent paracord handle wraps
[Re: kevingg]
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Old Hand
Registered: 02/11/10
Posts: 778
Loc: Los Angeles, CA
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That truly is some Beautiful work,Indeed!As for bacteria,If anything,It would be the Good Bacteria,but of course,lol!Short of Dis-colored,I've yet to see Paracord's Integrity,Compromised by U.V's but,I'm sure if Salt water were added to that,I'm sure something would come of it!In lieu of whale/walrus parts,I would call that the Scrimshaw of Today!I would Happily purchase some of that Knowledge, if it were available!
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