enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pipe hitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pipe_hitch

    Pipe hitch. The direction of the pulling force should be away from the wrapped coils. A pipe hitch is a hitch-type knot used to secure smooth cylindrical objects, [2] such as pipes, poles, beams, or spars. According to The Ashley Book of Knots, a pipe hitch is "used to lower a pipe or hoist one" [1] and as "another method of tying to a ...

  3. List of knots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_knots

    Tape knot (water knot) – frequently used in climbing for joining two ends of webbing together. Tarbuck knot – used by climbers and was primarily used with stranded nylon rope. Taut-line hitch – adjustable loop knot for use on lines under tension. Tensionless hitch – an anchor knot used for rappelling or rope rescue.

  4. Tensionless hitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensionless_hitch

    The working end of a rope is prepared by tying a figure-eight loop, and then clipping a carabiner through that loop. The rope is then wrapped around a smooth pole, pipe, round beam or tree branch which has a diameter greater than the rope. The rope is typically wrapped 3 to 4 times around the anchor, without crossing.

  5. Gripping sailor's hitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gripping_Sailor's_hitch

    Gripping sailor's hitch. Tie one rope to another rope, boom, spar, shaft, etc., and pull lengthwise. The gripping sailor's hitch[a] is a secure, jam-proof friction hitch used to tie one rope to another, or a rope to a pole, boom, spar, etc., when the pull is lengthwise along the object. It will even grip a tapered object, such as a marlin spike ...

  6. Offset overhand bend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Offset_overhand_bend

    Jamming. Typical use. sewing, weaving, baling, climbing, rappelling. ABoK. 246, 359, 1236, 1410, 1557, 1558, 3789. The offset overhand bend (OOB, ABoK No. 1410) is a knot used to join two ropes together end-to-end. It is formed by holding two rope ends next to each other and tying an overhand knot in them as if they were a single line.

  7. Hitch (knot) - Wikipedia

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

    A simple knot, commonly used by climbers and cavers as part of a life-lining or belay system: Ossel hitch: A knot used to attach a rope or line to an object. Palomar knot: A knot that is used for securing a fishing line to a fishing lure, snap or swivel. Pile hitch: A kind of hitch, which is a knot used for attaching rope to a pole or other ...

  8. Prusik knot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prusik_knot

    ABoK. #1763. A Prusik (/ ˈprʌsɪk / PRUSS-ik) is a friction hitch or knot used to attach a loop of cord around a rope, applied in climbing, canyoneering, mountaineering, caving, rope rescue, ziplining, and by arborists. The term Prusik is a name for both the loops of cord used to tie the hitch and the hitch itself, and the verb is "to prusik ...

  9. Rolling hitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolling_hitch

    Rolling hitch. The rolling hitch is a knot (see also Magnus hitch) used to attach a rope to a rod, pole, or another rope. A simple friction hitch, it is used for lengthwise pull along an object rather than at right angles. The rolling hitch is designed to resist lengthwise movement for only a single direction of pull. [1]