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Page Title: Figure 1-5.—Suspension lines on 28-foot canopy
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CANOPIES
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Figure 1-6.-Close-up view of a gore

pounds   per   square   inch;   tear strength  —5 pounds;  air permeability  —80  to  100  cubic feet per  minute.Tensile strength is the greatest stress   cloth   can   withstand   along   its   length without  rupturing,  expressed  as  the  number  of pounds   per   square   inch.    Tear   strength      is the   average   force,   expressed   in   pounds,   re- quired   to   continue   a   tear   across   either   the filling   or   the   warp   of   the   cloth.  A i r permeability   is  the  measured  amount,  in  cubic feet,  of  the  flow  of  air  through  a  square  foot  of cloth  in  1  minute  under  a  specific  pressure. The suspension lines are sewn into the canopy. These lines run continuously from the connector link on one side, through the canopy, and to the connector  link  on  the  other  side  (fig.  1-5).  The material between any two suspension lines is called a  gore.  There  are  28  gores  in  a  28-foot  canopy. Each gore is composed of four sections identified Figure  1-5.—Suspension  lines  on  28-foot  canopy. 1-7

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