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Gear Aid Tenacious Tape Iron-On Neoprene Repair Patch for Stretch Fabric and Wetsuits, Black, 6 x 10

With Tenacious Tape Neoprene Patch, you can fix rips, holes and tears on anything made of neoprene. Just cut the neoprene patch to fit and use your home iron to create a permanent repair. This iron-on patch is also useful for reinforcing high-wear areas including elbows, knees and under arms. Its special lining also gives watersports gear that extra abrasion resistance. Use Tenacious Tape Neoprene patch to extend the life of your wetsuits, drysuits, waders, gloves, boots and accessories.

Product Features

  • Permanent – Long lasting repairs
  • Reduces Wear – Specialized lining allows for increased abrasion resistance
  • Flexible – Patch flexes with material that’s ideal for reinforcing high-wear areas
  • Multipurpose – Use for all types of neoprene repair
  • Packaging may vary
  • Repairs in seconds with your ordinary household iron
  • Protects against abrasion with Barritex protective lining
  • Stretch fabric allows flexibility and comfort
  • Increases garment life, protects your investment
  • Heat protection with reusable heat shielding paper

Reblogged 5 years ago from www.amazon.com

Comments

Anonymous says:

Use more heat and longer Works great if done properly. I used this to repair areas of my wetsuit where the seams were leaking. I rinsed the suit well and let it dry for several days and then used 91% isopropyl alcohol to further clean the suit. After the alcohol dried, I cut the lengths of the repair fabric and used an iron on a medium setting and really went to it with the iron. I think people who have poor results do not get the patch hot enough. I do not use the heat paper supplied with the kit and apply the iron…

Anonymous says:

Worked on bike shorts

Anonymous says:

It worked great. The mending material has a bit less stretch … I bought this to repair Pearl Izumi cold-weather cycling tights. It worked great. The mending material has a bit less stretch than the tights did, but that’s fine.I then used it on lighter-weight tights (both had knees torn out from a crash). This worked well, also. Follow the directions for the heat from the iron. I went a little too high on the light tights, and you can see where the heat was on the fabric. My fault, and no big deal.Plenty of mending fabric left for…

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