Does anyone else here do any craftwork or mess with leather at al? I know Don makes some insane wood pieces, from furniture to pretty incredible picture frames. This is my favorite piece by him.
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Don, when it's in the case, it stays in the case. I made the one in the video just a couple months ago and it hasn't come out until yesterday when I had to take the holster apart to trace out lines to cut the new holster. I made the new holster a little more snug so it takes some doing to get it in there, then the screws are treated with Loctite and the whle piece is hardened to retain it's shap and not be flimsy. Not much chance this thing's going anywher. I carry my electronics - transmitter, eCollar, launcher transmitter, etc - in a mini tool box. When I take it out, it goes right on the belt loop. The only downfall to having it on my belt loop is in the rare case that I do use it to reinforce Whoa, I hold the stimulation while I pick the dog up and replace him. With it on my belt loop that's hard to do. I have thought about fixing a blaze orange strip of material, about two foot long, to the transmitter in case somethign happens.
Rook, thanks. The leads are more of a pleasure to make (I even charge less for most because I enjoy making them) because they're a little simpler, you can get creative with all that letter and they can look so sharp when you're done. I had a guy order 20 slip leads made like the one above except it was 1/2" instead of 1". Those are made in three segmens. You cut three strips of leather then twist them together and rivet them together at the ends. They are really easy to look at, but it probably takes a good four hours to make each of them.
Thanks for the heads up on the DC40s, too. I wish you would have been around about a year ago to talk me out of it! The guy dropped me a line out of the blue wanting a pair made so he shipped them off to me and I got to work on them. I actually priced them really low because when you hold a DC40 it seems pretty simple, not to mention the guy asked for a basic design. I figured I'd knock it out in a few hours. Turns out the nylong collar itself is double ply and there's a wire running between the two plies, from one plastic piece to the other. When I cut it open (thank goodness I didn't cut the wire!) I just groaned!!! Wound up taking about two weeks of buying materials and trying this then trying that. Finally got it licked and they came out good, but I lost money on that deal. I don't plan on doing that again on the cheap, in the future the price will be bumped up.