Langy,
So sorry, for taking your thread off topic
Your post offers good instructions for solving a problem that may be encountered off the beaten track and safe a lot of grief.
Ron,
I recall seeing a web site devoted to tieing shoe laces - IIRC it gave a method where you didn't release your fingers from the lace, between start and completion of the knot.
Edit: link to site http://www.fieggen.com/shoelace/
Years ago there was a film starring Paul Newman, involving foresters hauling logs using spar trees and winches (like the Washington Winch down Omeo way). A brief part showed Paul Newman tieing a bowline knot on the run, apparently without taking his hand from the rope - an amazing feat if it can be done.
Edit: Photograph of spar tree and washington winch added.
Apparently most of us have been tying our shoelaces incorrectly for our whole (shoe wearing) lives.
I've been waiting for a very long time to post this link
Ian's Shoelace Site - Shoelace Knots - How To Tie Your Shoes
And here's the one-handed bowline
The One Handed Bowline
Cheers
Simon
Between you, me, and the door post, I wouldn't go anywhere near that technique.
For one thing it'd take longer to prepare to tie the knot than to simply tie the flipping thing.
For another, bowlines are strong knots for situations where strength is required. Often when you need a bowline you are in a pressure situation (whether docking, in a stiff breeze on a yacht, making fast to someone who's in a risk situation, that kind of thing), so to loop a line and then to stick your hand through the loop is asking to have your wrist broken, getting yourself pulled over the side, having your hand/arm ripped off or crushed, etc. Get the idea?
Alan
2005 Disco 2 HSE
1983 Series III Stage 1 V8
I wouldn't trust that method as far as I could throw it, and whoever at Noble's told you that it was good wants his A..e kicked.
A proper splice has 6 full tucks and up to 6 half tucks, 3 or 4 proper size Bulldog clamps would be better, safer and quicker, but I still wouldn't stand within a 100 metres of that system either.
The tucks rely on friction and tightening of the splice to maintain the loop, you can buy a Line clamp from Nobles that has a set of jaws (shaped like the cable outer) that clamps onto the wire with an eye on the other end to hook a shackle and an extension strap/cable, the more weight applied the tighter the clamp grips, Don't frig around with half a..sed ideas it could kill you or someone else, Regards Frank.
A properly spliced wire/rope is alot better than any factory crimp job. I've had a few to many dodgy crimp jobs go on me while sailing to trust them (knowing how to splice is a bonus).
Ah, people who like knots! Years ago I did some maintenance work on irrigation equipment and learned to do a proper splicing repair to wire rope. The splice consumes, if I recall correctly, something like 12 feet of rope per 1/2" diameter, as each strand of each end is wound and tucked individually for about two feet. The finished splice is the same diameter as the rest of the rope, will wind onto drums the same and has no reduction in breaking strain. I have photocopied instructions from an irrigation manual filed away somewhere.
I agree with TANK on this loop splice- I don't think there is enough rope contact around the loop to provide enough friction to make this anything like secure under load.
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