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August 25th, 2010, 12:10
The Roll-Over Point is that spot along the length of the skin tube at which the skin tube folds over on itself, where outer skin transitions to inner skin.
For intact guys there is a flaccid roll-over point at the tip; the lowest-hanging visible part of the flaccid penis. Between this point and the base of the penis is outer skin. Between this point and the sulcus is inner foreskin. The surface of this roll-over point is a muco-cutaneous junction as occurs at various bodily orifices wherever normal skin transitions to mucosa. Other examples are the eyelids and lips. Deeper within the skin the natural roll-over point features the preputial sphincter which is a specialized ring of Dartos muscle fibres, like the shear layer of muscle cells that line all the penile skin, but stronger.
Upon Erection an intact man's skin can evert somewhat so that a different part of the skin tube acts as the roll-over point, or the skin can slink all the way onto the shaft leaving no roll-over. If the skin is manipulated, the rolling and gliding of the skin causes a travelling roll-over action.
For cut guys there typically is no roll-over point, as all the surviving skin bunches up on the shaft even while flaccid. The former muco-cutaneous junction and preputial sphincter that would have been present at birth is nearly always lost in circumcision. There is really no way to be cut around the perimeter of the skin tube without losing this natural roll-over point of the skin (except in very unusual delibrately non-traditional procedures) and preputial sphincter.
While using restoring techniques we induce a temporary roll-over point. With a common tapeless device the roll-over point is just the folded-under part of the skin gripped between the device and the retaining shell.
During and after restoring the flaccid roll-over point can be found hanging anywhere between the corona and a spot beyond the tip. Note that the scar can be inner-facing, at the roll-over point, or outer-facing. Restorers are not unanimous about which of these three is most desirable.
Some theorize it is possible to predict (http://www.foreskin-restoration.net/forum/showpost.php?p=45822&postcount=44) before restoring where the eventual flaccid roll-over point will lie along the length of the skin tube.
For intact guys there is a flaccid roll-over point at the tip; the lowest-hanging visible part of the flaccid penis. Between this point and the base of the penis is outer skin. Between this point and the sulcus is inner foreskin. The surface of this roll-over point is a muco-cutaneous junction as occurs at various bodily orifices wherever normal skin transitions to mucosa. Other examples are the eyelids and lips. Deeper within the skin the natural roll-over point features the preputial sphincter which is a specialized ring of Dartos muscle fibres, like the shear layer of muscle cells that line all the penile skin, but stronger.
Upon Erection an intact man's skin can evert somewhat so that a different part of the skin tube acts as the roll-over point, or the skin can slink all the way onto the shaft leaving no roll-over. If the skin is manipulated, the rolling and gliding of the skin causes a travelling roll-over action.
For cut guys there typically is no roll-over point, as all the surviving skin bunches up on the shaft even while flaccid. The former muco-cutaneous junction and preputial sphincter that would have been present at birth is nearly always lost in circumcision. There is really no way to be cut around the perimeter of the skin tube without losing this natural roll-over point of the skin (except in very unusual delibrately non-traditional procedures) and preputial sphincter.
While using restoring techniques we induce a temporary roll-over point. With a common tapeless device the roll-over point is just the folded-under part of the skin gripped between the device and the retaining shell.
During and after restoring the flaccid roll-over point can be found hanging anywhere between the corona and a spot beyond the tip. Note that the scar can be inner-facing, at the roll-over point, or outer-facing. Restorers are not unanimous about which of these three is most desirable.
Some theorize it is possible to predict (http://www.foreskin-restoration.net/forum/showpost.php?p=45822&postcount=44) before restoring where the eventual flaccid roll-over point will lie along the length of the skin tube.