I just hit amazon too. I found a pillow cover set that is listed as pillow ticking and has the blue stripes that you see in ticking material. It's listed as pure 100% cotton. It should arrive mid may from the US. and listed as made in the US, not China.I've been buying it on Amazon. You do have to read the blurb pretty closely, other than that no problems.
We never see materials like that sold at our Walmart stores here in Canukastan.My local Walmart has both the red and the blue striped pillow ticking. The red is .020" and the blue I need to measure when it's back in stock. I plan to get a yard of it soon.
We never see materials like that sold at our Walmart stores here in Canukastan.
Your last paragraph is a hoot!When I taught in the Canadian army, we told recruits to go to the QM stores and get 50 feet of shore line or a box of grid squares or Laser dots, maybe grease the track pads on the M113 APCs lol..... that list goes on.....As noted it doesn’t have to be tick. A canvas or denim will work just as good.
It does need be all natural fiber. Cotton or linen. And hemp fiber canvas will serve, but it’s costly and hard to find.
Kid skin chamois or deer splits work also.
But just being 100% cotton isn’t enough. A flannel is great to clean with and can be the proper thickness but doesn’t work well. Stay away from even all natural fiber soft cloths.
The only reason that pillow ticking is so popular is the strips help you align your cloth. When the stripes point along true north south line ( not magnetic north south line, a common mistake by new shooters) you get your best groups.
Plain cloth requires a very close look to see if you are properly aligned.
While I’ve bought lots of cloth buying patching strips from a dealer is a little more expensive but I find it easier to get consistent thickness
We sent them for Flight line ot to the Cop shack for K9P lubricant. If they were really naive, we could get them running around with a plastic bag getting air samples.Your last paragraph is a hoot!When I taught in the Canadian army, we told recruits to go to the QM stores and get 50 feet of shore line or a box of grid squares or Laser dots, maybe grease the track pads on the M113 APCs lol..... that list goes on.....
I have used an old denim shirt that supplied patch material many years ago .My wife and I were out Saturday blasting away with our .50s. We were loading .495 RBs with commercial patches bought from Cabelas. (The thin yellow lubed ones).Even those weren’t easy to load. We have a .490 RB mold on order from Hillfolk in Saskatchewan that should make it easier for us to load RBs with heavier patch material. I have used a heavy white denim from a taekwondo suit that worked superbly. We’re just waiting for that mold....I have plenty of pillow ticking and have used a lot of it in the past. Then I tried mattress ticking. Mattress ticking is heavier and thicker than pillow ticking, at least it has been where I got my last batch. Stripes are either blue or brown and it measures in the neighborhood of around .019". The pillow ticking I've been able to find was around .015". Cotton canvas duck was the next step up in patching and it worked very well. Then years ago I tried denim and heavy canvas, both ran about .024" and found the canvas seated more easily than either the denim or the (thinner) canvas duck. For years now I've relied on the heavy, unbleached canvas for every gun with the exception of a smoothbore and a .54 rifle; they do better with thinner patches.
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