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What is Bar Tacking?

Mary McMahon
Mary McMahon
Mary McMahon
Mary McMahon

Bar tacking is a specialized sewing stitch designed to provide great tensile strength to the garment or equipment it is used on. It is commonly used on backpacks, tents, tactical gear, and other heavy wear sewn items where normally sewn stitches might give way at a crucial moment. In general, the tacking is a sign of good quality, although the rest of the product should always be looked over carefully as well. When a sewing pattern calls for bar tacking, it indicates that the designer feels that section of the pattern is a critical area that needs extra reinforcement.

To create bar tacking, a manufacturer sews a very tight zigzag stitch across the width of the material. In some cases, the sewer may go over the seam again, causing the stitch to have an x-like form. Usually, very strong threads are used so that they will stand up to high pressure. When done correctly, bar tacking can help support loads of up to 400 pounds (almost 200 kilograms). Many backpacking companies in particular pride themselves on the number of bar tacks integrated into their products, claiming that they will wear harder and longer than the competition.

Hang gliding gear is often reinforced by a bar tacking stitch.
Hang gliding gear is often reinforced by a bar tacking stitch.

For commercial work, specialized sewing machines are capable of handling high volumes of bar tacking through heavy materials like nylon webbing and canvas. Commercial machines tend to be expensive, however, and smaller companies prefer to modify their existing sewing equipment. Home sewers can create this stitch if they have a zigzag setting on their sewing machines, although they may have to do it by hand if the material is very thick. In both cases, a heavy weight waxed thread should be used.

Bar tacking works to reinforce material by spreading pressure more evenly along the width of the fabric, with a large number of stitches covering a small area. When pressure is put on the tacked area, the thread will not give way as readily, because it is not in a straight line in grain with the fabric, as most sewing is. Indeed, fabric will more frequently give way around the stitching, especially if it is old or if it has been stressed by the elements.

Rock climbing harnesses, hang gliding gear, and a wide variety of other products manufactured for outdoor sports are reinforced by bar tacking. Because much of the gear is critical to survival, it is important for users to frequently inspect and test such gear and to discard equipment that seems unreliable. In general, if support gear is frayed or worn, stretched out of shape, or torn, it is probably not safe for use.

Mary McMahon
Mary McMahon

Ever since she began contributing to the site several years ago, Mary has embraced the exciting challenge of being a WiseGEEK researcher and writer. Mary has a liberal arts degree from Goddard College and spends her free time reading, cooking, and exploring the great outdoors.

Learn more...
Mary McMahon
Mary McMahon

Ever since she began contributing to the site several years ago, Mary has embraced the exciting challenge of being a WiseGEEK researcher and writer. Mary has a liberal arts degree from Goddard College and spends her free time reading, cooking, and exploring the great outdoors.

Learn more...

Discussion Comments

Logicfest

@Terrificli -- And that is one of the major drawbacks to shopping online. If you see something at a local store, you can inspect it to get an idea of whether it is a quality item or not. If you buy stuff on the Internet, you really don't have the opportunity to inspect like that.

That is one of the advantages that brick and mortar stores still have.

Terrificli

It can be critical to look for that bar tacking when buying anything that needs to hold up under heavy use. Well, maybe not literally anything, but you get the idea.

Let me explain.

I got a laptop back off the Internet not too long ago because it was dirt cheap and looked good. However, there is no bar tacking securing the handle or anything else. The result, of course, is that that inexpensive laptop case turned out to be a cheap, horrible one that is now worthless.

The lesson here is that I should have spent a little bit more and gotten a quality laptop case with bar tacking on the stress points. Live and learn, right?

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    • Hang gliding gear is often reinforced by a bar tacking stitch.
      By: James Steidl
      Hang gliding gear is often reinforced by a bar tacking stitch.