On 2/13/2012 5:46 AM, Jim Wilkins wrote:
> "wilby"<
bold...@marchfail.com> wrote in message
> news:jha32g$8be$1...@dont-email.me...
>> On 2/11/2012 7:13 PM, Jim Wilkins wrote:
>>> "wilby"<
bold...@marchfail.com> wrote in message
>>> news:jh6ua2$fj1$1...@dont-email.me...
>>>> On 2/9/2012 5:15 AM,
dca...@krl.org wrote:
>>>>> On Feb 7, 8:09 pm, wilby<
bolda...@marchfail.com> wrote:
>>>>>> I have an application for rings made of 1/16 inch diameter hard ss
>>>>>> wire.
>>>>>> The rings are around 3/8 to 1/2 inch in diamater and the ends butt
>>>>>> together.
>>>> Wilby
>>>
>>> Sounds like chain mail.
>>> jsw
>
>> My application is in the construction of salt water fishing gear. I
>> suppose wearing chain mail might protect me from shark bites?
>> Wilby
>
>
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shark_suit
>
> jsw
>
>
Well, I just read "... Similar to chainmail, divers wearing sharksuits
can suffer from broken bones from the sheer force of a shark chomping
down on a limb."
I think I'll stay in the boat, thanks anyway. I'm a whimp when it comes
to jumping in the ocean with large toothed creatures.
Several years ago I was fishing near an island off Mexico in the
Pacific. We were trying to catch yellow fin tuna but all we were getting
on deck were big bloody tuna heads. The reef sharks were thick and right
on the surface, they ate all but the head. Big white smiling teeth all
around us.
I could imagine that this is exactly what it looked like when pirates
threw their enemies to the sharks. A person would have lasted about
three seconds before they were in several different shark stomachs.
We pulled the anchor and headed to another island.
Wilby