Sheathing in a sentence as a noun

I live in a house with aluminum siding and foil wrapped sheathing.

Random speculation: conduit fills with water or mud, sheathing rots.

I have about 6 lightning cables and only one has started to lose its rubber sheathing after years of abuse.

I was stunned to find out homes used to use panels of foamboard for sheathing aside from corners and one osb panel every 25 feet.

Anybody have photos of older power adapters to see if that sheathing has always been there?

Now commonly polyurethane foam installed with a special spray gun when the outer sheathing is on but the inner walls are not.

FYI: I had that problem a decade ago, and the problem ended up being a nick in the coax sheathing on the run from the house to the neighborhood box. Water would get in and ruin the signal, but it was fine when it was dry.

The nerves have a layer of fatty acids called Myelin that act as a sheathing/sheilding around the nerve fibers to prevent crosstalk.

Current construction usually involves sheathing the outside of the house with plywood sheets and covering the sheets with vinyl siding.

Gunmakers would then probably promote something like aramid or kevlar fabric wallboard sheathing, too, for more bullet-resistant walls.

Last 50 years of change includes modern nail guns, engineered lumber, hurricane anchors, plywood roof sheathing, vapor barriers, and countless other differences in how homes are built and the tools we use to do it. There is nothing special about software, other industries also evolve and grow their methods and tools.

"The attack was thorough and carried out by someone who knew the system intimately -- down to removing steel sheathing on data cables to destroy them, according to three people with knowledge of the incident.

There are certainly a lot of cheaply/poorly build appliances covered in some shiny stainless or whatever the fashionable appliance sheathing of the moment is. New luxury developments have been pretty notorious for doing that sort of thing with the household appliances.

Yup, as part of a research project way back in college, we even made crude artificial muscles out of mesh wire sheathing[0] and custom-formed long, thin rubber "balloons" actuated using compressed air. the efficiency was horrible, but we were primarily interested in the gait dynamics of our robot, not efficiency.

Even once you get through the layers of protective sheathing, and around the copper power lines that provide power to the undersea amps, you're suggesting that they fully remove the reflective sheathing to bend the fiber and tap off light?

After a couple years, the plastic in the little clip you're supposed to use to wind up the cable reacted with the plastic in the cable, and if you moved it, it just tore the cable sheathing apart.> more obvious if you go read a tear-down of themThe electronics are solid, I'll grant them that.

Sheathing definitions

noun

protective covering consisting, for example, of a layer of boards applied to the studs and joists of a building to strengthen it and serve as a foundation for a weatherproof exterior

See also: overlay overlayer