10.2 maybe.What is your final OD : 10mm maybe.
If it works - fine. That's the part of the construction I most dread. (There IS such a thing as heat shrink tubing with a glue coating inside but I can't get in in green (starboard) - only in red (port) - and I'm too anal to live with the cosmetic mismatched of materials.)I will use a thick walled (+2.4mm) heat shrink 3:1 rather than the glue operation.. easier.
1. With what I'm using the pin is folded back and retained virtually parallel to the inside tubing walls....why not to use a thinner tube ID 5mm ?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/aerotowrelease/8306296899/
That vinyl tubing has an ID of 0.250 inches. The aluminum is 0.259. Good luck seeing or feeling a difference.
If the pin were folded back beyond parallel your performance would be degraded until the barrel was pulled all the way back to the tip.
And even if it isn't folded all the way to parallel... when the angle is shy a few degrees the difference is extremely negligible.
2. When you start approaching 400 pounds direct loading you risk damaging the pin if you're engaging anything thicker than the Yale Crystalyne I've got in:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/aerotowrelease/8311348069/
I can't find anything that thin that holds to that tension and they discontinued that diameter line.
3. So I don't recommend that that pin be loaded to over 350 pounds.
4. You can blow 350 pounds direct loading (700 pounds towline) with a seventeen pound pull. You can do that with your thumb and index finger.
5. You will NEVER - even without weak links - see anything close to that in real life.
I would GUESS that you're not going to be able to detect a difference. We've already got massive overkill, but if you can do anything to improve performance - cool, I'm all for it. You might get something detectable by using stainless steel but I'm not sure it would be worth it. (The aluminum is cheap, light, and easy to work with.)Vectran seems to me a good idea as it slide better than the leechline in wrapped dyneema and is thick enough to stabilize the barrel with no load.
1. The more you lengthen the Bridle Link the more you're introducing a possibility for full failure. (And if you're still alive after that I guarantee you'll wish you had releases on BOTH shoulders.)I'm not sure to be confortable with barrel shifted forward (required by the length of the bridlelink)...
2. I and others have flown with those proportions with fewer problems than the ubiquitous junk.
3. Out in front you know where they are because you can see them.
4. You can't tell how for away from your hand a barrel will be when you need it because you can't tell in advance where the basetube is going to be when you need to release.
However... You will not be using a barrel unless your two point bridle has wrapped at the tow ring or you're deliberately towing one point. So the bar IS likely to be back and the barrels WILL thus be farther away from them.
5. But why worry? The second you take your hand off the basetube you're probably gonna die anyway.
If you're using the barrel releases as secondaries in two point towing - what the hell - you're probably never going to need them because it's almost certain that the Bridle Link will blow. And you'll undoubtedly be at altitude anyway.
If you're regularly towing one point you are out of your mind not using one of the many cheap and easy bite controlled releases. The Russians have been using them since the dinosaurs roamed the Earth and there are a couple of good models in my photo set. One guy I was corresponding with - Craig Stanley - took the Four-String concept - invented by Steve Kinsley - and made himself a clunky but perfectly safe and functional unit with about five dollars worth of material from the hardware store.
The hand pulled barrel release is just fine for all circumstances you're likely to encounter but if you think it's going to be adequate for a low level emergency your chances of being killed on tow are up by a factor of at least twenty.
And I'll be more than happy to keep helping you with something bulletproof for one of your shoulders.