Larrup wrote:I was thinking the exact opposite. The problem I was thinking about was preventing fingers being shoved under the shield to masturbate. If the shield can be deformed, in a direction normal to the body, then fingers can get in.
Oh, you do want to design the belt so fingers can't be slipped behind, but rigidity is not the sole answer. You want the material to resist the forces that can be applied by a finger while having more tolerance for body movements. Here is a diagram:
- bg-movements.jpg (20 KiB) Viewed 9563 times
The red band on her waist is the waist belt.
The white line is the shield and connecting pieces fitted snugly while she is standing up.
As you can see in the right side of the picture, that shape isn't even close to matching the contour of her body when she sits down. The green line represents the shape it should be. This is why a belt made of absolutely rigid materials isn't a good choice - she can't bend, sit, walk up stairs, etc.
The question would then be how much flexing is too much?
Well, I weigh 125lbs and assuming my legs are 25% of that, there is about 90lbs pressing on the chair surface when I sit down. Some of that is passed to the chair from my fanny, some of that is passed to the chair from the bottom of my shield. Because my shield would make contact due to its slightly cupped shape, it will resist bending and try to push the waistband up. Since my waistband fits snugly and I'm also muscular, my waistbelt doesn't go up so the shield and the connecting piece behind (i.e. between my butt cheeks) will flex.
Because the back part is much narrower (1/2” versus 2-3” depending where the comparison is made), the back does the majority of the flexing and the cupped shield over my ladybits stays where it’s designed to stay.
This is what happens when I sit. The front remains against my tummy, the shield remains against and covering my ladybits, and the 1/2" wide part going up my back hovers away from my skin as it's pushed out.
My husband (who designed my belt) wanted to include a strong spring in tension out back so when I sit there would be tension preventing the back from moving away from my skin but he couldn’t find a suitable spring because it would have to tolerate showers, soap, shampoo, conditioners and perspiration and not corrode. This is why the back of my belt is solid.
By the way, I exaggerated the drawing left to right to illustrate the point. In reality, the narrow part between my butt cheeks doesn't move out all that far and remains between my cheeks, just not against my skin when I sit.
I’ve mentioned I’m very athletic in several posts was not to brag but to show people how much of an anchor point my waistbelt is. My waistbelt remains where it is all the time no matter my position or movements. Since I have very little body fat underneath, it doesn’t shift. Muscles have less “give” than body fat. Having solid anchor points is key to keeping the shield where you want it.
Larrup wrote:So, when measuring, should the woman be seated?
For my current belt, my husband measured me a multitude of ways standing, sitting, laying on my tummy, laying on my back, and standing with one foot on a stair. He factored in some kind of numerical weighting then averaged them together to what became the dimensions of my belt.
Larrup wrote:So if that is the ultimate goal, it seems that perhaps she must tolerate the discomfort of the belt digging harder into her waist when she sits.
My belt is most comfortable when I’m standing or laying down. Fairly comfortable when walking, and tolerable when sitting. As all things we design, they become a sum of compromises.
By the way, I don’t stick fingers or objects behind my shield to masturbate, yet I masturbate often. All it takes is pressing a
against the front shield and
oh… my… God… ! My shield is slightly cupped so my labia isn’t touching the metal either, but the vibrations transmit through the shield’s perimeter where it touches my skin surrounding my ladybits, vibrating them by proxy. If my husband locked me up with the large, heavy stainless dildo inside, my blasphemous exclamations are oh-so-loud.
If you think that’s bad, a couple times my husband handcuffed my wrists behind my back when he had to only work a half-day, thinking that would prevent me from buzzing my shield. Little did he know I was able to kick it up off the floor onto the bed, bump the power switch to high, then grind my shield on the vibrating head.
Larrup wrote:I appreciate your comments, because I am seriously thinking of becoming a belt designer and manufacturer. I have been studying material properties of stainless, and have concluded that type 316LVM is the best for belts. I need to learn how to weld. I already know how to operate machine tools like lathes, presses, and milling machines.
Mine is 330 and my husband selected that over the others because it’s the most corrosion resistant, as he (and I) were concerned the belt might corrode over time after being exposed to soaps, hair products in the shower and perspiration. That doesn’t make our choice correct, I’m merely sharing why we picked it in case that's helpful. My husband is a huge fan of "overkill".