FastRope71 wrote:There is that spray on rubber (Flex seal?) sold at wally world for about 13 dollars. probably similar to your bedliner stuff, but I thought it worth mentioning.
Also there are the small tiles with the netting molded in. This mesh figure about 3/8 inch thick or less per layer, standard gap between 1" tiles.
we thought of that. But most of those tiles are BARELY held on to the mesh. We thought we might adapt that idea using fiberglass mesh designed for car bondo and super gluing the tiles to it.
FastRope71 wrote: Another material for adhering your tile to the fabric would be spray adhesive. 3m and durcon (sp?) both make it. I think I found my can @ Home depot.
Thought of that too but the adhesive really doesn't work on the shiny side at all - at least the spray adhesive I own. not so great on the textured side either. The bumps that help hold the thin set don't help hold our mesh on at all.
FastRope71 wrote:If I were to have a go at it I think I would use hexagonal tiles with about 1/16" or less gap between them adhered to nylon cloth or kevlar, and layered sheet/tile/sheetx2/tile/sheetx2/tile/sheetx2. That gives you 3 layers of tile, and 7 layers of nylon. Weight would be about on par with a commercial vest. resistance according to your current postings is on par or exceeds level IIIA. one nice thing would be that you might not need to attach the layers to one another (saving perhaps the innermost layer if actually pressed into service).
Now this Sir, sounds like genius. I thought that porcelain had to be fired under pressure, but after doing some research it doesn't look like that is the case. By doing you hexagon idea and having custom thickness of tiles...that adds up to super awesome. Now the question is how do you make the tiles as strong as the commercial ones. We are currently using grade 4 tile remnants - which are easily twice if not 4 times stronger than ceramic tiles.
FastRope71 wrote:I have two kilns, so if needed we might be able to figure out a way to make our own tiles for less than commercial, seeing as how we don't need the pretty stain that makes them attractive to home improvement customers. we might even be able to mold in the gap and let the tiles fracture from each other on their own after being attached to the nylon layers. Kind of like a slightly overfilled ice tray.
our latest hair brained idea is to dip each tile into bedliner and allow to dry onto a layer of fiberglass mesh, then assemble our tile layers by sticking one layer of mesh to the top of the next with some additional bed liner. With your idea we could either do that with the entire 9x12 sheet or make 1.5 x 12 sheets and line them up next to each other on the mesh to make a layer.
The second way would work pretty easily for offset by doing half a tile to start one strip and a full tile for the next one and reverse the order on the layer underneath. Or we could do the outermost layer in hex and the next layer in squares or triangles to reduce overlap of gaps.
I need to sit down and figure out some things on this. But it is a very good idea that I had sorta toyed with and discarded as impractical. Thank you for making me dig in and research better.