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ceramic kilt?
The company I work for manufacturers fire barrier products which incorporate a ceramic cloth.
The feel of this material is very satiny so I think the swish factor would be awesome. The material weighs a ton though. I can't imagine an 8 yard kilt in this material. A 4 or 5 yard kilt might be do-able. The other issue is comes in a white-ish silver color. I need to find out if it comes in black.
Can you imagine a flame retardent kilt. Might be somehting for the blacksmiths in the crowd
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![Quote](http://www.xmarksthescot.com/forum/images/misc/quote_icon.png) Originally Posted by cavscout
The company I work for manufacturers fire barrier products which incorporate a ceramic cloth.
I can't imagine wearing that stuff on/near bare skin for any length of time. The ceramic cloth I've worked with in the past had a nasty tendency to leave fiberglass-like splinters in exposed skin.
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Well, there is always Nomex...
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something about wearing a pleated vase scares me...
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![Quote](http://www.xmarksthescot.com/forum/images/misc/quote_icon.png) Originally Posted by Caradoc
I can't imagine wearing that stuff on/near bare skin for any length of time. The ceramic cloth I've worked with in the past had a nasty tendency to leave fiberglass-like splinters in exposed skin.
I had wondered about that also, but it felt so smooth I don't know if it is the same stuff. Even the trimed edges feel pretty soft, not prickely like I imagine fiberglass.
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![Quote](http://www.xmarksthescot.com/forum/images/misc/quote_icon.png) Originally Posted by cavscout
I had wondered about that also, but it felt so smooth I don't know if it is the same stuff. Even the trimed edges feel pretty soft, not prickely like I imagine fiberglass.
It does, at first. The more you "work" with the cloth, the more the fibers break down.
Like I said, it's been a while since I've worked with the stuff, but it felt nice and smooth until it had been folded and refolded a couple of times, and then I ended up having to use a wad of duct tape to pull splinters out of my hands.
After that, I used gloves all the time while handling it. Further research indicated I should have been using a respirator, too, as inhaling the fragments is bad for the lungs.
Can you find an MSDS on the material?
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Here's an information sheet on it.
The abridged version is:
Tests indicate it is not a hazard to inhalation but can irritate skin.
Guess it would have to be lined with an "under kilt", or might work as a protective apron to be worn over a kilt.
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![Quote](http://www.xmarksthescot.com/forum/images/misc/quote_icon.png) Originally Posted by cavscout
Here's an information sheet on it.
The abridged version is:
Tests indicate it is not a hazard to inhalation but can irritate skin.
Guess it would have to be lined with an "under kilt", or might work as a protective apron to be worn over a kilt.
The line "Contaminated clothing should be laundered each day" indicates to me that it wouldn't be useful for anything I do - a simple welder's apron suffices for some of the stuff.
Nomex would be nice, maybe. Or Kevlar.
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Looks like Nomex is dyeable. Anyone work in an industry that uses this stuff off a roll?
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6th July 06, 12:08 PM
#10
Uh...just because you can do something doesn't neccesarily mean that you should do it...how about kevlar?...bulletproof! "Aim high, boys, they're wearin' bulletproof kilts!"
Best
AA
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