For all you mechanics and do-it-yourselfers.

I quit doing this job myself, I hire a professional, but I'm still interested in learning the process.

My question is about your gauge for marking the stretch.

Since the cloth is completely relaxed when you're drawing the stretch lines, it seems to me, if I used that tool the cloth would end up loose?

How does your gauge compensate for a cloth that's completely relaxed with dips and valleys, mostly from fold creases.

In real life do you need someone to hold on to the other side of the cloth? or The gauge has been calibrated somehow for the error and once the process starts it just all comes together somehow?

Interesting for sure.

Note: I didn't watch the entire video.
 
I quit doing this job myself, I hire a professional, but I'm still interested in learning the process.

My question is about your gauge for marking the stretch.

Since the cloth is completely relaxed when you're drawing the stretch lines, it seems to me, if I used that tool the cloth would end up loose?

How does your gauge compensate for a cloth that's completely relaxed with dips and valleys, mostly from fold creases.

In real life do you need someone to hold on to the other side of the cloth? or The gauge has been calibrated somehow for the error and once the process starts it just all comes together somehow?

Interesting for sure.

Note: I didn't watch the entire video.
The video shows how the stretch is done, watch it.
 
That's ok, the video wasn't really directed to you anyway, it's more for the table mechanics that want to improve their skills in order to increase their skills and do better work! And to start supporting a new wave of mechanics starting to realize this is a skilled industry, and those that do better work, get more referrals thereby getting more work, it's more for the business minded workers!
 
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