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FIRE DANCING EQUIPMENT, Cape Town, Johannesburg, Durban,
South Africa.

Fire
Dancing Equipment, information and definitions via
the web:
Fire Dancing Equipment and Construction
The typical construction of fire performance tools
involves a metallic structure with wicking material
made from fibreglass, cotton, or Kevlar blended with
fibreglass, Nomex, and other poly-aramids.
Kevlar-blend wicks are the most common, and are
considered standard equipment in modern fire
performance. Though most wick suppliers refer to
their wick simply as Kevlar, almost no suppliers
sell a 100% Kevlar wick, which is both expensive and
not particularly absorbent. Most serious
contemporary performers avoid cotton and other
natural materials because such wicks disintegrate
after relatively few uses, and can come apart during
use, showering the performer and audience with
flaming debris.
A typical poi construction would consist of a single
or double-looped handle made of webbing, Kevlar
fabric, or leather. This is connected to a swivel
and a length of chain or cable. This chain or cable
then connects to another swivel, and then to the
wick, which is made out of tape wick (a wide, flat
webbing made of wick material), or rope wick. The
wick material is typically folded or tied to a
central core in either a knot or lanyard-type fold.

The chain or cable can be anything from stainless
steel wire rope (preferred by some for its low cost,
light weight, high strength, and almost invisible
profile, but not by others because it tangles
easily) to dog chain (preferred by some for its heft
and low cost) to industrial ball chain, which is the
most common chain for fire performance equipment.
Made of nickel-plated steel, stainless steel, or
black-oxide brass, ball chain in the #13 to #20 size
ranges provides excellent strength, a fluid feel,
and great tangle prevention. Since every link on the
chain swivels, one can eliminate dedicated swivels
from a design, and body wrapping and chain wrapping
moves become much easier. Extra cost and a higher
weight to durability ratio are the biggest downsides
to ball chain.
A fire staff typically consists of a long
cylindrical section of either aluminium tube
(lighter, more suitable for fast-spinning tricks) or
wood (heavier, more suited to 'contact' moves in
which the staff retains contact with the performer
throughout the trick; see contact juggling) with a
length of wick secured at either end, usually with
screws. Wooden-cored staves often have thin sheet
metal wrapped around the ends to prevent charring of
the wood from the heat - this will have holes
drilled through it to allow the wick to be screwed
securely into the core. Metal staves generally have
a length of wooden dowel inserted into each end;
holes are drilled through the metal to allow the
wicks' screws to gain firm purchase on the wooden
core. A grip of some sort is usually fashioned in
the centre of the staff to provide a comfortable
hand-hold - most commonly leather, or a soft,
self-adhesive grip of a type designed for hockey
sticks or tennis rackets.

Important factors in fire dancing equipment
construction
Building high quality fire performance equipment
involves the balancing of a number of factors to
achieve performance suited for the specific intended
use by the performer. Even if you are planning on
buying prefabricated equipment, understanding the
following factors and how they interrelate will
allow you to best purchase the right implement.
* Balance - Balance is how the weight is distributed
in the implement. It is critical when making staffs,
torches, hula hoops, clubs and swords, as balance
will determine the axis around which the implement
rotates.

* Weight- Making implements heavier will, up to a
certain point, allow you to spin them faster.
However weight will also make the implement
increasingly unwieldy. Also, heavy implements are
more likely to lead to repetitive stress disorder,
and cause injuries if you make mistakes. Heavier
implements make certain types of contact juggling
much easier, and certain high speed manipulation
more difficult.
* Wick size - Generally, the more exposed surface
area of wick on the prop, the larger the flame. More
wick will increase the fuel the implement will hold
and if wick is layered increase burn time. The prop
will also be heavier, and more expensive to
construct. The more fuel the prop holds the larger
the increase in weight after fuelling.
* Cost - The fourth factor is cost. Frequently new
prop development, and sometimes even building
standard designs, require extra materials and tools
that are not readily available. Even dedicated home
tinkerers find themselves weighing the cost of
purchasing versus the cost and time of build at
home.
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