1″ Spider/Poly Webbing (25 Feet)
$11.45
MYG designed this webbing, and it is specially made for us. This is a 1-inch UHMWPE and polypropylene mixed webbing which is what gives it the cool look. We’ve designed this webbing to be a lighter weight alternative to regular polyester webbing but still work with buckles unlike Kevlar webbing. This is a great middle ground when it comes to webbings.
Description
MYG designed this webbing, and it is specially made for us. This is a 1-inch UHMWPE and polypropylene mixed webbing which is what gives it the cool look. We’ve designed this webbing to be a lighter weight alternative to regular polyester webbing but still work with buckles unlike Kevlar webbing. This is a great middle ground when it comes to webbings. The key features of this webbing are that it weighs less than polyester webbing, has very low stretch and it works perfect with cinch buckles, spiders, Dutch buckles, etc.
QTY of 1 equals 25ft. If you order more than 1 unit it will come in one continuous piece, for example 3 units would be a 75-foot roll of webbing.
*All Specs are estimates and may vary from color to color and batch to batch.
| Specs | ||
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Additional information
| Weight | 128 g |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 1 × 1 × 1 in |
| SKU | SOV004 |
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Question
CharlieSmith –
What’s the break strength of this webbing?
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admin –
This webbing is rated for up to 1500 pounds. Thanks!
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Question
CharlesBuckingham –
Can this be sewn in the same way as the polyester webbing? Does it require a different thread or technique?
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admin –
It can be sewn the same way.
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Question
Kevin Butler –
Will this withstand being tied in a knot for an end loop?
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Carolyn –
yes
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Grams8 (verified owner) –
I bought 75ft of the Spider/Poly to make up some tree straps. It’s fantastic stuff to work with. It has a nice tight weave but is very pliant. It cuts easily with a sharp rotary cutter and the mix of polypro and Dyneema melts nicely at the cut end for a neat finish. I used V69 thread, a regular domestic machine with a ball point needle and sewing was no problem. Some of the finished straps I’m going to use with my Beetle Buckles. I can’t see the Beetle Buckles coming off accidentally but just in case I folded back the last inch of the webbing on itself and plain stitched close to the fold to create a flap, like the ones you often see on the hip belts of packs. You can still thread the doubled-over flap through the buckle to install/uninstall but it’s just an extra bit of security for my bling!
UPDATE Oct 2020: 6 months on and these Spider/Poly straps have performed brilliantly. I made a pair that are 130″ long and occasionally I’m left with a long tail. Borrowing another idea from belts and harnesses, a couple of months ago I added a 3/4 inch wide elasticated band loop to each strap to tidy up the excess strap. I leave the band near the Beetle Buckle, adjust the strap length as normal then just slide the elasticated band up to the sewn tab and the straps look really neat and tidy. 1g for the pair, hope those two borrowed ideas help someone!
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Question
Erwin Rosenbury (verified owner) –
Dog chews-through standard harness webbing in ten-seconds. Been re-sewing Spider-webbing over the chewed-through standard-webbing and she can’t even fray it. One issue however, is that Spider-webbing is very tight (which is better than too loose), making adjustments difficult. Any suggestions?
If Spider-webbing is Dutchware proprietary, one would think harness-maker’s would buy it by the mile and save customer’s the trouble of re-sewing? (and virtually every dog over 15lbs has this problem)
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Erwin Rosenbury (verified owner) –
Dog can’t chew-through this webbing. Doesn’t even fray it. Been through more than half-dozen harnesses (several at $70-a-pop) with whatever webbing manufactures choose, all chewed to bits. Dog’d chew through within minutes and come to show her broken harness, as if to say, “Look how proficient I’ve become at chewing through my harness, aren’t you proud of me?”
Sewed this dyneema Spider-webbing over the chewed-through sections. Dog couldn’t make any progress and so she finally gave-up. Resewing harnesses is a real pain, especially when harness-maker’s could’ve used this Dyneema webbing in the first place. This Spider webbing already fits tight in the 1″ buckles and of course it’s webbing sewn to webbing, so that means clearing the old webbing just-so, because double-layers of webbing don’t work in the adjustment-buckles. This dog-owner uses 3-loop harnesses at all times (safer for dog), so there are six webbings to sew for each harness. Takes hours to sew each harness and adjustments end-up being a bit more finicky, but at least there’s this Spider-webbing or there’d be no harness at all.
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