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Q&A

Why is silnylon/silpoly slippery, but silicone sealant is not?

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I am seam-sealing a tent made from silpoly with silicone sealant (generic 100% silicone, couln't find any silnet around me).

The fabric is very slippery, much more than regular polyester fabric or nylon fabric.

The parts covered in silicone sealant are the opposite of slippery (missing a word here, help?).

Is there any reason for that?

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This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/q/9798. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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2 answers

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I'm not a materials scientist, so can't give you a definitive answer.

But I do know that if you make your own silnylon or silpoly by soaking the base fabric in a solution of silicone and mineral spirit and air-drying, the final material is far less slippery than commercial silnylon/silpoly.

So it seems that the slippery finish of the commercial materials is an artifact of the manufacturing process used, rather than anything inherent in the silicon itself.

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Silpoly is based on polyester, which means it's hydrophobic (doesn't absorb water). Not all slippery materials are hydrophobic, but this definitely factors in. Silicone sealant also repels water, but through different properties. Those different properties are also the ones that let it adhere to many different surfaces. Silicone has a high coefficient of friction but a low resistance to shear, which is why it works as a lubricant.

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This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/a/10710. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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