▲ | david-gpu 3 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
I went through that exact rabbit hole a couple of years ago, and after much watching the HowNot2 channel, and much reading other sources, I came to the conclusion that you only need to learn very few knots to do nearly everything. The specific knots you learn matter little as long as you select knots with a long eatablished safety record. My personal short list are the following: 1. Joining two ropes (i.e. bend): Zeppelin bend, or Figure-8 bend. If the ropes have a very different diameter you will need a different knot, such as a Double Sheet Bend. 2. Holding on to an object (i.e. hitch): Two Round Turns & Two Half Hitches. More turns and half hitches make it more secure. 3. Making a fixed-diameter loop at the end of a rope: Figure-8 loop. 4. Making a fixed diameter loop in the middle of a rope: Alpine Butterfly, or simply take another piece of rope and do a Prusik Loop. 5. Grabbing onto a rope, such as when you want a loop that can be cinched down (i.e. friction hitch): Icicle Hitch. I personally do Round Turns & Half Hitches instead, and will die on that hill. Another useful trick that can be done with a combination of the above is called a Trucker's Hitch. It is not so much a unique knot, but a common combination of the principles above. For those who know about knots: please resist the temptation to nitpick and offer alternatives. Yes, there are many others. No, it doesn't matter. The knots above, or a combination thereof, covers 95% of everything you can do with rope, they are safe, and easy to verify. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | rstuart4133 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
> you only need to learn very few knots to do nearly everything I see a lot of posts here along these lines. It turns out there is a trade-off between knots: how easy they are to undo vs how likely they are to spontaneously untie, particularly when not under load. Most of the "every knot you need" recommendations here seem to come from people tying things down for a short haul, and consequently come from the the "easy to untie" end of the spectrum. The sheepshank is great for a temporary tie down but obviously falls apart when not under load. Less obviously so does the bowline, figure 8, and most knots composed of half-hitches. A rock climber takes a dim view of knots that spontaneously untie when they aren't looking, so they use a different set of knots. At the extreme are fishermen. A single strand of nylon is slippery, is weakened by kinks, and yet a fisherman's knot must remain secure while drifting in the surf being bashed waves. Consequently, they will use complex, slow to tie knots with 7 or 10 loops. Your knots look to be at the "easy to untie" kind, except the alpine butterfly. If it has been under high load for a while it can be a real bitch to get apart. It's popular with climbers, but I would not recommend it for tying down a load. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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