Polylon and Perflex
The bane of player and organ techs for 30
years
I wrote an article once and referred to the "dreaded
polylon" and several folks did not understand
why.
Polylon is nylon cloth bonded to polyurethane and is made for
colorful raincoats. It works really well for that but
don't put it into a player piano or pipe
organ.
I used the term "Dreaded Polylon" because I have spent more
time in the last 20 years RE-Restoring instruments rebuilt
with Polylon and Perflex than I have spent restoring original
leather and zephyr untouched instruments.
These include pipe organs that were rendered useless in less
than 12 years by the unholy holes in Polylon creases. I have
replaced Polylon in red, yellow, blue, purple/gray, black and
several others. I have samples of the cloths I took off after
5-12 years of use and they all show the poly falling off the
nylon at all creases and corners.
The only Polylon I have not yet had trouble with is the solid
purple both sides that American Piano Supply sells. I was once
talked into using it by a previous boss, but I no longer use it
I just don't want to take the chance. I only use what I have
left to seal seams, holes, etc.
Polylon must be glued on with PVC glue but I have seen it crawl
off the pneumatic boards after some months. The polylon
does not stick very well and then seems to just start flaking
the polyurethane off after several years
Yes, PVC glue is obnoxious to get off, but I just submerse the
glued item to be re-restored into Lacquer thinner until the
glue turns into what looks like blobs of snot. I can
then easily rub the PVC_E off the pieces with my
fingers.
Perflex was another synthetic material that was adopted by the
rebuilding field in the 1970's. It looks like surgical
glove material. It was first made for the US military so
they could make water bags out of it and toss them out of
helicopters to troops on the ground without breakage. It
worked really well for that just about nothing would puncture
it. There was lots left after the Vietnam War and it was
tried on pipe organ and player piano pouches and worked very
well. The one drawback, again, was the gluing of the
stuff showed it crawling off months or years later. There
was a way to bond it to paper rings so the paper could be glued
down though and that was done for years.
Once the original batch made for the military had run out,
folks had another batch made and while it looked okay, it was
not good for pouches. After 6 years of flexing, those
pouches would develop crescent shaped cracks in them rendering
them useless.
Ask me why my shop never uses any synthetics of ANY kind. We
use no modern materials that have not been tested for at least
30 years. No contact cement...it falls off in 5-10 years and
turns dark brown, too. No hot glue guns, except for hanging
hammers, but none of it stays in the piano. We use some PVC-E
glue as it has shown its ability to hold up for decades of use.
We also use no polyurethane varnish, it rots the wood from the
inside out. The reason is we have to stand behind our warranty
for five years.
Polylon sounded like a good idea but turned out to be a
disaster
Doug L. Bullock, 06-22-09 Copyright
1997-2009
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