|
kennoyce
Sep 20, 2012, 7:49 PM
Post #26 of 28
(1624 views)
Shortcut
Registered: Mar 6, 2001
Posts: 1338
|
sittingduck wrote: What do you guys think is the correct answer to a beginner climber asking if she should use a stopper knot on her figure 8 tie in? "Use a rethreaded bowline" or "Yes, use a stopper knot!"? Neither
|
|
|
|
|
HouseHippo
Sep 21, 2012, 10:37 PM
Post #27 of 28
(1577 views)
Shortcut
Registered: Sep 19, 2012
Posts: 5
|
Thanks for the replies everyone!
|
|
|
|
|
knudenoggin
Sep 26, 2012, 4:00 AM
Post #28 of 28
(1520 views)
Shortcut
Registered: May 6, 2004
Posts: 596
|
Interesting in that the 2nd & 3rd videos show an >>asymmetric<< dressing of the knot, in contrast to the first. For this, and various other often ignored aspects of knot geometry, one should be skeptical of "tests" that show <you name it> and give no insight as to such details. As for the so-called (by rockclimbers) "re-threaded bowline" (aka "bowline on a bight", as far as the end result goes, vs. the method of tying ...), it strikes me as odd to want to trace the bowline, rather than (e.g.) taking the 2nd pass of the tail up through the "rabbit hole" again and repeating that part; then, one has a 4 diameters through the central nipping loop (turn of the mainline around these rabbit-paths). That knot isn't all so tight, but coming untied now requires the tail working out of the two tucks, and then doing so for those of the base bowline --with a lot of tail flopping around prior such catastrophe. There are some better things to to with the 2nd pass. (One could simply run the rabbit out of the hole and then just tie off with a strangle knot (the "half a dbl.fish" thing). Which gets rid of the strange-tightened-shape issues, btw. *kN*
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|