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  2. Harness bend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harness_bend

    The double harness bend is an unfinished Blood knot: The half hitches need to take one or several turns around both ropes before going through the eye in the middle. The double harness bend with parallel ends is an unfinished Reever knot : The ends need to go through the opposite half hitch, to be lined up with its own rope body.

  3. List of climbing knots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_climbing_knots

    Ropes can be of unequal sizes. It is often used to tie both ends of the same rope together to form a circle. Triple fisherman's knot: Overhand bend (also known as European death knot, Euro death knot, EDK): The Overhand bend is a simple and fast way to join two ropes, notably for rappelling. Can be very useful in situations where speed is ...

  4. Bend (knot) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bend_(knot)

    A bend suitable for tying smaller lines to larger lines, such as in attaching playing strings to the thick silk eyes of the anchorage knot. Hunter's bend: A bend consisting of two interlocking overhand knots. Nail knot: A bend used in fly fishing to join lines of different diameters. It is useful but difficult to tie by hand. One-sided overhand ...

  5. Reef knot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reef_knot

    The reef knot's familiarity, ease of tying, and visually appealing symmetry conceal its weakness. The International Guild of Knot Tyers warns that this knot should never be used to bend two ropes together. [14] However, modern instruction teaches that it is fine for noncritical applications, [15] especially if stabilized.

  6. List of knot terminology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_knot_terminology

    An example is the figure-eight loop knot, which can be tied in the bight, by tying a figure-eight knot using a bight instead of the end of the rope. However, tying the knot this way does not allow putting the loop around a fixed object like a tree; to do that, the knot must be tied in a two-stage process by first tying a figure-eight knot ...

  7. List of binding knots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_binding_knots

    Knotted-ends knots are held in place by the two ends of the line being knotted together. Stopping may be either a temporary whipping or seizing, the commonest variety consisting of a few round turns finished off with a reef knot. The purpose of a whipping is to prevent the end of a rope from fraying. A seizing holds several objects together.

  8. Butterfly bend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butterfly_bend

    The butterfly bend is a knot used to join the ends of two ropes together. It is the analogous bend form of the butterfly loop , [ 1 ] in that it is the butterfly loop with the loop cut. [ 2 ] The observation that the butterfly loop is secure enough to isolate a worn or damaged section of rope within the loop indicated that the bend form of the ...

  9. Ashley's bend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashley's_bend

    Ashley's bend is a knot used to securely join the ends of two ropes together. It is similar to several related bend knots which consist of two interlocking overhand knots, and in particular the alpine butterfly bend. [1] These related bends differ by the way the two constituent overhand knots are interlocked.