A 1260 American made Ballistic Nylon is the best you can get at this time but they are coming up with new fabrics all the time. A 2520 Foreign made ballistic nylon is not a bad choice either.
The ballistic nylon will be a higher denier (thickness of the thread). Also will be shiny/glossy compared to the matte finish of polyester. Ballistic nylon will be much more durable and much less likey to tear or scuff. You can get higher denier polyester (900, 1200, 1800) which will be better for wear and tear. The price will reflect this however as 600d poly is low to mid price point whereas the others are higher.
is 330 deniers nylon better than 500 D cordura ? 100 D cordura ? (for backback with audio gear) thanks so much
The higher the denier, the thicker. See link.
500 denier is stronger than 300 denier. Denier is a unit of measurement that indicates the thickness of fabric; a higher denier number means a thicker and often more durable material. Therefore, a 500 denier fabric will generally be more resistant to wear and tear compared to a 300 denier fabric.
Lydie Denier is 170 cm.
Tony Denier has written: 'Tony Denier's parlor pantomimes' -- subject(s): Pantomimes
1500 denier, the threads are more dense and closer together thus they are more durable.
Denier nylon is a unit of measuring the thickness/weight of a thinly spun fiber. It indicates the material's durability, plus the fineness of fiber filaments and yarns - both natural and synthetic. The higher the denier, the thicker the fiber; the lower the denier, the finer the fiber. per Wiki answer to what is denier.
yes. 1200 denier reinforced nylon is much better than 1000 denier cordura nylon. Hands down.
the denier or Kayser Platinum is the best
The denier measurement is not directly convertible to millimeters as they measure different things - denier measures the fineness of threads while millimeters measure length or thickness. Denier is typically used for fabrics' weight or thickness, with a higher denier number indicating a thicker fabric.
Yes, higher denier generally indicates higher thickness in fabrics. Denier is a unit of measurement for the thickness of fibers or threads in a fabric, with a higher denier value indicating thicker and heavier material.