Strider wrote:I recently bought a pair of Zamberlan Baffin's. Not because I wanted a GoreTex liner (I didn't), but because out of every boot available in Hobart these are what fitted me best.
This is hardly a representative sample Wayno.wayno wrote:i had a pair of boots unstitch at the ankle revealing the inside. the gore tex membrane was in tatters . gore tex doesnt last in footwear
wayno wrote:every pair of gore tex footwear i've had, about a dozen, have started leaking well before the life of the boots was up. sometimes after a few weeks use.
seeing the gore tex damaged as it was in that one pair told me the damage had been a work in progress for some time to get to that stage....
Orion wrote:I've had pairs that never leaked and I've had more than one develop a leak. The people at the local retail shop always insist that it is condensation from my own foot perspiration. But there is no way that cold water always at the same area near my toe on just one of the two boots would be explained by that.
GPSGuided wrote:How do Gortex and other boot membranes fail? Given their "integrated" location, is there anything a user can do to alter their durability? I would have thought not.
It's legit, but an autograft is often preferred.GPSGuided wrote:There are many ways to use PTFE - lamination, coating, impregnation amongst others. I don't think PTFE is strong enough for the replacement of ligaments alone but they are well accepted as a biocompatible material and is good for coating amongst others. Whilst I don't think flex is one of the failure modes but think pressure point wear will do more damage eg. Wear from long toe nails, bunion and other bony foot protrusions. Just a thought and maybe more reason to find good fitting shoes and well padded socks.
ePTFE is also used as a synthetic blood vessel.http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2322926/ wrote:The Gore-Tex ligament prosthesis is composed of a single long fiber of expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) arranged into loops. Extensive mechanical testing has shown that the resulting ultimate tensile strength is about 3 times that of the human ACL and the results from cyclical creep tests and bending fatigue testing seem to identify Gore-Tex as the strongest synthetic ACL replacement in terms of pure material stability
icefest wrote:It's legit, but an autograft is often preferred.
ePTFE is also used as a synthetic blood vessel.
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