Rope connection knot, knotting method

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  • Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 609

  • @DanielBrown-nb9zz
    @DanielBrown-nb9zz Год назад +39

    Knots 3 and 5 are actually the same knot. Good Video!

  • @johnsettles3
    @johnsettles3 Год назад +126

    1 Surgeon's Ligature - 0:01
    2 (Knot Sure... Anyone?) - 0:34
    3 Hunter's Bend - 1:19
    4 Slipped Sheet Bend - 2:01
    5 Hunter's Bend - 2:41
    6 Double Fisherman's Knot - 3:27

    • @johnsettles3
      @johnsettles3 Год назад +3

      @@fermleegrasspit2187 A square knot is a well known knot, also known as the Reef Knot but that is not this 2nd knot. If I Google "Square Knot" that 2nd knot is not what comes up either. Is there another name, or care to elaborate? Thanks!

    • @ajnosek1528
      @ajnosek1528 Год назад +3

      3 and 5 are actually zeppelin bends, not hunters bends. In a zeppelin bend, the first 2 turns are separate. In a hunters bend, the first 2 turns intersect each other.

    • @johnsettles3
      @johnsettles3 Год назад +2

      @@ajnosek1528 Incorrect. Look closely, 3 & 5 are Hunter's Bends. Look at each knot at 01:49 & 03:07. Each internal part of the rope is under each loop. That never happens with the Zeppelin Bend it does with the Hunter's.

    • @ajnosek1528
      @ajnosek1528 Год назад

      @@johnsettles3 okay, I believe you are right in that they aren’t zeppelin bends. But these are not tied correctly to be the hunters bend. A true hunters bend doesn’t start with 2 separate eye holes. They need to intersect each other first.

    • @johnsettles3
      @johnsettles3 Год назад +1

      ​@@ajnosek1528 OK, I've looked at both sides of the knot, and the way the ropes lay on both sides is consistent with a Hunter's bend. I am pretty sure those are Hunter's bends. Where do you see the difference? I think you should look closer. By all means if I'm missing something let me know... There are many ways to tie a knot, but what matters is the end result. From what I can see these are Hunter's bends when completed. Knots can be tied in reverse and sometimes appear different, but are the same knot. Anyway, I'm open to observations...

  • @ObeyCamp
    @ObeyCamp Год назад +37

    That last one (number 6,) is so nice and clean. I mean, they all are, but some of them have the working ends coming out perpendicular to the standing part which never looks quite as tidy as when they're all parallel.
    Your skill and knowledge must be very satisfying. My grandpa used to teach me tons of knots and I really wish I had kept up with such a useful skill. Maybe I should get some rope and a book of knots!

    • @bjooo
      @bjooo Год назад

      Nice and clean but very difficult to untie after loading. Zeppelin bend or sheet bend is better for reusability.

    • @benveach9689
      @benveach9689 Год назад +2

      And maybe even adopt a new grandpa

    • @kennethbolton951
      @kennethbolton951 Год назад

      two of the ones that are perpendicular (go off at a ninety) are quick release.

    • @gordonneverdies
      @gordonneverdies 11 месяцев назад +2

      It's a double fisherman's knot. IDK why he didn't put the names of the knots in there.

    • @arthurjeremypearson
      @arthurjeremypearson 9 месяцев назад

      Three and five are the same knot. If you put the names in, it would reveal that he accidentally included the same knot two times.

  • @johnwest7993
    @johnwest7993 Год назад +14

    What's as important to know about knots is when and where to use each one.

  • @timhyatt9185
    @timhyatt9185 Год назад +50

    #3 and # 5 are exactly the same knot, just tied different ways. #4 is a quick-release sheet bend. the problem is ALL of these reduce the overall strength of the connection, sacrificing as much as 50% of the rope strength or more.
    There are two knots that preserve much more of the rope strength but still provide for a positive connection that will not come undone under load. the Water-knot and the Figure-8 knot. A Water knot is much like #6 though more interlaced, however is suffers from the problem that under a severe load, it will "weld" itself together and become nearly impossible to remove. (someitmes to the point of soaking it and beating it with a mallet) The single best knot to connect to ropes together, is the Figure-8 knot. It preserves 75-80% of the rope strength, and is easily undone by flexing the knot itself till it loosens.

    • @LuLe232
      @LuLe232 Год назад +3

      Check out zeppelin bend, for two ends of similarly sized rope that you plan to untie, I know of no better.

    • @DiabloOutdoors
      @DiabloOutdoors Год назад +7

      6 is the double fisherman knot and the only secure one among those demonstrated in this video

    • @OGRH
      @OGRH Год назад +1

      The catacomb deep-skull knot blows all of these away! Yall should look it up! We used it cave diving in bora bora during WW2.

    • @_PaRaDoXxXxX_
      @_PaRaDoXxXxX_ 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@LuLe232топ 3: плоский, цеппелин, лиановый.

    • @LuLe232
      @LuLe232 10 месяцев назад

      @@_PaRaDoXxXxX_ Sorry, I can't read cyrilic.

  • @davidfrisk4978
    @davidfrisk4978 Год назад +5

    I don't generally get excited over knots and all.. But, this is one of my favorites... Sadly, I got rusty. I do want to thank you for the reminder! Not rocket science as they say.. However, do it correct, and we all can trust in it. THANKS!

  • @tkarlmann
    @tkarlmann Год назад +189

    Adding the names of the knots would be useful!

    • @arnaudpelham6906
      @arnaudpelham6906 Год назад +11

      none of them have names because he just made them

    • @tkarlmann
      @tkarlmann Год назад +20

      @@arnaudpelham6906 Sorry, one of them is called "Bowline on a bight".

    • @eatonknass247
      @eatonknass247 Год назад +4

      Please, tell me, how does the name effect how to tie the knot or its functionality? If you want a video on knots, how to tie them, and the name make it yourself since you seem to be knowledgeable about them since you decided it was some kind of flex to name one of them. If the name doesn't effect its functionality its unimportant thus not needed.

    • @tkarlmann
      @tkarlmann Год назад +24

      @@eatonknass247 Simple. Knots have names! I think some of your knots also have names. Or, I could drag my laptop into the wild, and when I need to tie a knot, I'll just watch your (supposedly) Unique-to-you knots!

    • @ClickClack_Bam
      @ClickClack_Bam Год назад +27

      ​@@eatonknass247 Are you serious with your post?
      You're asking how does naming something effect how it works or it's functionality?
      For starters this video is about education & the spreading of educational materials.
      Giving things names or putting the names where they belong allows EVERYBODY to refer to them easily & allows for structure of this material.
      That you'd want to sit there & watch a subject/topic WITHOUT names being given to that topic is just asinine.

  • @muzikhed
    @muzikhed Год назад +23

    Nice knots, the last one is beautiful the way it slides into its locking position. Cheers.

  • @kerryclark1926
    @kerryclark1926 Год назад +4

    I wish I could remember these knots when I need to tie one!

  • @JoseGarcia-bm9pp
    @JoseGarcia-bm9pp Год назад +5

    Knot something I will ever remember but this was an excellent demonstration, even my shoelaces are tricky, tricky, tricky😉

  • @jakeisjake112
    @jakeisjake112 Год назад +1

    Number four was hot af. This was some real knotty stuff you did. Loved it!

  • @AudioGardenSlave123
    @AudioGardenSlave123 Год назад +5

    They're all so simple yet I can never remember them when I need to tie anything together.

  • @speedysimajn
    @speedysimajn Год назад +49

    Last year, after a small shipwreck, my sailboat got partially stuck in shallow waters, so I used the no.6 to anchor boat on a beach tree and some boulders, and it's safe to say that this knot is indestructible. It held a 5 ton sailboat during a high wind storm for 3 days.

    • @ConReese
      @ConReese Год назад +11

      Knots are only as good as the rope and anchor points

    • @ezra3776
      @ezra3776 Год назад +16

      I'm more impressed with the tree.

    • @George_Vargiamides
      @George_Vargiamides Год назад +3

      I use that knot to tie two pieces of fishing line. It's a really strong knot.

    • @ВальдемарБлагов
      @ВальдемарБлагов Год назад +3

      Узел может и выдержит. А вот ваш швартовый это не шкертик. Может не выдержать.
      Вы когда нибудь видели как рвуться концы дивметром 80-100 мм.
      Звук плётки и удар в брашпиль как кувалдой. Человека ломает как тростинку!

    • @ВальдемарБлагов
      @ВальдемарБлагов Год назад +2

      ​@@ConReese 😂
      В такелаже морском, верёвок нет. Там концы. А хрен верёвкин сидит на причале!🤗

  • @taylorhanson1814
    @taylorhanson1814 Год назад +2

    Thanks for showing us the ropes!

  • @a1ar127
    @a1ar127 Год назад +5

    Lots of ways to do it. Hell, a plain square knot will work if you keep the two standing lines on the same side. Two questions you should ask yourself when deciding how to tie the ropes are how easily it can be untied loaded or unloaded, and how easy to untie if the lines are wet.

  • @ajmann1187
    @ajmann1187 Год назад +7

    I usually use the double fisherman's knot (#6) sometimes a blood knot which is fast and easy and works well on flat rope. Neither will work loose or compromise the rope strength as much as many other knots do. Untie with hacksaw 😂

  • @ripdimebag42
    @ripdimebag42 Год назад +2

    No idea why I'm watching knot tying videos at 2 am but the last one is pretty cool I guess

  • @archlab007
    @archlab007 7 месяцев назад

    I am absolutely in awe by the Knowledge of Knots, the utility & the sheer Ingenuity of what one can do with the simple rope or string.

  • @pangolin0317
    @pangolin0317 10 месяцев назад +2

    試用第一種:美觀、牢靠、易拆⋯真是太巧妙了👍

  • @quixote5844
    @quixote5844 Год назад +20

    Best demonstration I’ve ever seen. Much better than drawings. Good choice to use diferent color ropes.
    How about showing the names and best use?

    • @handknottips4591
      @handknottips4591  Год назад +6

      Thank you for your comment, I will explain in detail in the future

    • @frankjoziasse7914
      @frankjoziasse7914 Год назад

      @@handknottips4591 Can you tell me which video explains these details?

  • @davidellis7695
    @davidellis7695 Год назад +163

    Would be curious to know which knots are strongest based on a pull test.

    • @mach1553
      @mach1553 Год назад +21

      I second that request 👍

    • @ledoynier3694
      @ledoynier3694 Год назад +15

      @@mach1553 Some work well with rope but not so much with strings. I tried a few and even some that look to be self locking on rope slide so easily with thinner hemp string. The last one has always been my goto for that and works a treat. Hemp string will break before the knot can give way. pretty handy around the garden

    • @WanderingStil
      @WanderingStil Год назад +8

      @@ledoynier3694 the first knot was almost a "surgeons" knot. Easy double square knot. I've used this on 1/8" poly line to pull electrical wire in conduit.

    • @dannygjk
      @dannygjk Год назад +6

      Depends a lot on how it's attached and the lay of the rope.. Example a bowline is about 53% if it's 3 strand rope. You can eyeball a knot, bend, or hitch and estimate the % based on how sharply bent the rope is where the greatest tension is going to be. You have to be careful tho. Example if a piece of nylon rope has previously been put under a high strain it may have lost some strength at the point where the most strain was applied. That's one reason why you don't put a rope at a high strain. You are supposed to use a conservative safety factor. In the old days it was 1/6 of the breaking strength of the rope. These days if possible 1/10 is recommended.

    • @boeubanks7507
      @boeubanks7507 Год назад +10

      The more telling test is a release test. Some of these knots will hold under tension but come loose when tension is released. There is a reason you don't use square knots for lifting people or heavy items over head.

  • @plywoodcarjohnson5412
    @plywoodcarjohnson5412 Год назад +1

    Nr 6! Bcoz the ends are not sticking out and looking weird. Great upload thx!

  • @ФарходбекСамиев
    @ФарходбекСамиев Год назад +3

    Приятно смотреть, класс, спасибо

  • @sapper1-3g57
    @sapper1-3g57 3 месяца назад

    Thank you! I coinjoined two ropes to make my jump rope work.

  • @quartz-fm
    @quartz-fm 9 месяцев назад +1

    damn your knots! all 6 came undone! I watched this video to tie a 3mm braided carpon clothesline. These knots do not hold if the diameter of the rope is small, and come undone with normal stretching

  • @scottcooper578
    @scottcooper578 Год назад +1

    All variations on a good ol' simple square knot! When you're in the thick of it simple is better.

  • @keggerous
    @keggerous 11 месяцев назад

    #6 is probably my favorite knot in the world...

  • @habibullahsamander2798
    @habibullahsamander2798 Год назад

    The last one is my favorite. I bought some roof and had the last knot. I figured out how to tie myself without anyone teaching me. And now I just saw your video and I tied it the same.

    • @arthurjeremypearson
      @arthurjeremypearson 9 месяцев назад

      That is called the double fisherman's knot. That's very impressive it came up with it on your own, climbers trusted as the best way of trying two rope ends together. I think.

  • @valarmathym4870
    @valarmathym4870 5 месяцев назад

    Very interesting and useful. Fantastic video.

  • @tomglase5333
    @tomglase5333 Год назад +2

    There is no sleight of hand but it still looks like a magic trick.

  • @Buddy-Biggs-Adventures
    @Buddy-Biggs-Adventures Год назад +5

    Wow, that is so simple and good.

  • @mstalcup
    @mstalcup Год назад +31

    No. 3 is a zeppelin bend. It is stable, very easy to untie, and will not slip under load. It's my favorite bend to join two ropes or even musical instrument wire. Edit: This actually seems to be a Hunter's bend. Thanks to J Settles for picking up on this. I still really like and highly recommend the zeppelin bend.

    • @johnsettles3
      @johnsettles3 Год назад +5

      3 & 5 are a Hunter's Bend, similar, but different from a Zeppelin Bend. It jams up easier FYI.

    • @johnsettles3
      @johnsettles3 Год назад +5

      ​ @mstalcup Sorry, but respectfully, that's not true, those are hunters bends. Look at those final knot & then look at a Zeppelin Bend, there are differences, and in knots a tiny difference makes a completely different knot. Those are Hunter's Bends, different from Zeppelin Bend.

    • @haliaeetus8221
      @haliaeetus8221 Год назад

      So which is the better knot to be both strong and to be able to untie, the Zeppelin or the Hunter?

    • @bjooo
      @bjooo Год назад +3

      @@haliaeetus8221 Zeppelin is better. Sheet bend also work well when doubled.

    • @haliaeetus8221
      @haliaeetus8221 Год назад

      @@bjooo Thank you for advising.

  • @kogi04
    @kogi04 Год назад +8

    #6 is double fisherman's knot. Crazy strong. Hard to undo.

    • @lengerer
      @lengerer Год назад +1

      Super easy to undo with rope. Each knot slides on the opposing rope.
      Popular knot for hammock sleeping

  • @KiwiKoNZ
    @KiwiKoNZ Год назад +1

    They all hold the same purpose only they look a bit different, but which is the strongest I wonder? … Cool vid dude 😎👍✨

  • @ぬん-x2i
    @ぬん-x2i Год назад

    色々な結び方出来るの素晴らしい✨
    てか、掌の筋肉すごいっっ💪

  • @Pineconepicker1
    @Pineconepicker1 Год назад +1

    Anyone who was a boy scout from the 1940's to 1960's was taught all these knots as well as the art of lashing and splicing. as well as knots used in sailing and climbing.

  • @VaracolacidVesci
    @VaracolacidVesci Год назад +9

    3 and 5 are the same knot made in a different way

    • @SpassImGlas
      @SpassImGlas Год назад +3

      They both appear to be faulty zeppelin bends.

  • @jim-stacy
    @jim-stacy Год назад +3

    You shouldof put the names too. I love knot names. Usually nautical links

  • @johanlarsson9805
    @johanlarsson9805 Год назад +1

    I used nr 6 after watching another toturial to join the tiny threads for my blinds after they had snapped. I remembered it when we moved out, they held for years!

  • @cluelessinky
    @cluelessinky 9 месяцев назад +3

    How about ditching the annoying background “music”!

  • @howardd8097
    @howardd8097 3 месяца назад

    근데 영상 진짜 너무 깔끔하네요. 너무 잘 보고 갑니다.
    더 많은 매듭 정보 기대하겠습니다.

  • @Perktube1
    @Perktube1 Год назад +6

    Last one: double fisherman's knot. 😉

  • @incorrectobydefault2392
    @incorrectobydefault2392 10 месяцев назад

    I've usted the last one many times for abseiling joining two ropes together and works wonderfully

  • @ТаняЛисенко-у5к
    @ТаняЛисенко-у5к Год назад +4

    Круто) и понятно всё, благодарю)!

  • @UDG2000
    @UDG2000 Год назад +2

    #6 is the nicest !

  • @Эрдэни-м5ъ
    @Эрдэни-м5ъ 8 месяцев назад

    4 ый способ понравился👍, и развязать обратно можно быстро

  • @Rondogardener
    @Rondogardener Год назад

    I did not learn any of these in boy scouts many years ago. Thanks.

  • @xday5999
    @xday5999 Год назад +2

    Thank you for telling me a good way to tie a knot!!!!!!

  • @MrDiederikDuck
    @MrDiederikDuck Год назад +6

    Nice knots, but they al have the disadvantage that they will get stuck in cracks when you try to pull the rope. Just tie both the ropes together in a single stitch. When you pull the rope, the knot will turn outside whilst moving over the rocks.

  • @gilzor9376
    @gilzor9376 Год назад +2

    Interesting video, clever attention grabbing subject. The next level would be to display each knot under increasing tension until failure to show the effects each style has on the rope's limit. My guess is, with all knot styles using the same rope and force application rate, the knots that have a center mass not inline with the force axis, might fail from the knot shearing the rope, and probably with considerably less force. I'll bet on the first knot, kinda like a square knot with one extra loop on the first wrap. Well, if the experiment interests you, I'd watch and like! Gonna check out your other videos, good job 👍

    • @AndreiChera
      @AndreiChera Год назад

      a polite way of telling that it's actually not a good job. no knot names, advantages, disadvantages etc.

    • @gilzor9376
      @gilzor9376 Год назад

      @@AndreiChera I don't get it (?)

    • @0Metatron
      @0Metatron Год назад +1

      Yea the 1’st one looks the strongest to me.
      Probably knot easy to undo after load though 😂

  • @MRahilyard
    @MRahilyard Год назад +23

    Many years ago, we were given a synthetic rope to test. We set up a pulley system and used knot number 6 to make a loop. We then pulled on that loop until it broke with a huge release of force. The interesting thing was that the knot strands has fused together.

    • @haliaeetus8221
      @haliaeetus8221 Год назад

      I don't understand unless you meant to write you used knot number 6 (not numerous 6)?

    • @shangri-la-la-la
      @shangri-la-la-la Год назад +12

      It is called a double fisherman's knot.
      It is generally considered the only knot you should be using to connect 2 ropes together in rock climbing.

  • @0Metatron
    @0Metatron Год назад

    The 1’st one was the most simple and elegant to me

  • @jonathanwishart9104
    @jonathanwishart9104 Год назад +3

    There's knotting to see here.

  • @michaelavroom747
    @michaelavroom747 8 месяцев назад

    Great knots, but turn the volume down to avoid music trauma

  • @wildbillfrombuffalo
    @wildbillfrombuffalo Год назад

    I was curious of many people know how to make a thief knot? I learned this when I was young and never asked anyone! Good day mateys!

  • @user-qjvqfjv
    @user-qjvqfjv Год назад +4

    Can you do a follow-up video where you test how much force each knot can withstand?

  • @labswee7635
    @labswee7635 Год назад

    I love the final knot, good for necklace

  • @sen.garyhart4239
    @sen.garyhart4239 Год назад +3

    # 6 works great & easy to tie BUT, if it's subjected to a significant load then it is permanent.

  • @sg-for-peace
    @sg-for-peace Год назад

    Very interesting video. It will be more educative if it is also mentioned as to where (or in which situation) the knots are more userful.

  • @graham2631
    @graham2631 Год назад +1

    The third one is best. It can be untied and works well on connecting different sized ropes.

  • @mdnkmr
    @mdnkmr Год назад +1

    Knot at no. 6 is so cute.....

  • @NUHAHA80
    @NUHAHA80 11 месяцев назад

    1번이 단순하면서도 깔끔한데, 4번은 나중 해체까지 완벽하네요

  • @habtamusium8646
    @habtamusium8646 Год назад

    many many thanks ! I think it is 1 of a skill need to introduced in the curriculum .

  • @mothman-jz8ug
    @mothman-jz8ug Год назад +1

    OMG, it's a noose! Always remember the formula C+T=N, or Cordage + Twist = NOOSE. Let's all go to our crying closet immediately.

  • @cluek9780
    @cluek9780 Год назад +3

    #1 is nothing more than a surgeon’s knot. I like #4: the undoable sheetbend. If low-tension (lanyard), #6 is adjustable length, probably very strong.

  • @nugsymalone1247
    @nugsymalone1247 9 месяцев назад

    This is the video I always need when my wash line breaks

  • @СергейЛагутин-б7д
    @СергейЛагутин-б7д Год назад +2

    Спасибо.полезное видео. уже научился

    • @MrDEM10
      @MrDEM10 Год назад +3

      Главное не научиться,а не забыть))

  • @ponip1
    @ponip1 3 месяца назад

    отлично, напоминает узел хирурга

  • @MrEddHard
    @MrEddHard Год назад +4

    Interesting demonstration and a good presentation but I would add the names and uses of the knots. They all join rope but they have different applications to be used safely.

    • @TheEddgreen
      @TheEddgreen Год назад

      Piggybacking bs for views. Sheet bend or square knot wil do.

  • @norcoauctions
    @norcoauctions Год назад

    that was awesome dude...thanks for sharing

  • @mickmiah7605
    @mickmiah7605 Год назад +3

    I use the first of these to join main-line to Shock Leader for beach casting. I find that it is more likely that the main-line will break before this know plus it is relatively small when passing through the eye of my rod guides.

  • @СергейЛёвкин-р4у
    @СергейЛёвкин-р4у Год назад +2

    Чётко, просто и надёжно!

    • @ГаражУЛьвовича
      @ГаражУЛьвовича Год назад +2

      Сергей Лёвкин (старику Бари привет)
      Чётко, то чётко, только если бы был ковбоем, и ли каюром, и вязал бы их на дню ......,а то один узел, чтоб просто петля была полдня шмурыгал, а на утро ну как назло на фаркопий петельку потребовалось накинуть, ну и хули? 5минут повыстебывался и на ,,два узла" затянул

    • @КОЗАКМАМАЙ-ц3я
      @КОЗАКМАМАЙ-ц3я Год назад +1

      @@ГаражУЛьвовича был бы ты такелажником промышленным альпинистом или моряком.... нормально их вязать и быстро ковбои соврать не дадут

    • @567Бубалайф
      @567Бубалайф Год назад

      Интересно насколько они надежны?

    • @АлексейАнтипов-ь4й
      @АлексейАнтипов-ь4й Год назад

      @@567Бубалайф половина из показанных узлов - точно бесполезны и не важно на сколько они надежны...

  • @airforce1872
    @airforce1872 9 месяцев назад +1

    Замечательно!!!

  • @Extra_Monolith
    @Extra_Monolith Год назад

    The thumbnail looks so perfect, I mistook it for one of these oddly satisfying animation videos

  • @ilonakrause2308
    @ilonakrause2308 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for this video!!! Is there a kind of mini lighter that you can use to precisely flame the ends of a rope?

  • @Joseph_Hamilton
    @Joseph_Hamilton Год назад +1

    My dad told me that the best knots can hold a very high amount of force, but can also be taken apart with a single pull.

    • @barakgooroo5082
      @barakgooroo5082 Год назад

      Then your dad is a narrow minded fool. Bless his heart.

  • @ioi0001
    @ioi0001 5 месяцев назад

    Wow! Nice video!

  • @michaelnefedov9178
    @michaelnefedov9178 Год назад +5

    Шесть узлов - это хорошо, но все ли они равноценны? Какой из этих узлов используют альпинисты? Может какой-то из них позволяет связывать верёвки разной толщины? Может какой-то из них нельзя использовать на верёвках, которые тянуться или мокрые? Вопросов много, ответов нет.
    Six knots is good, but are they all equal? Which of these knots do climbers use? Maybe one of them allows you to tie ropes of different thicknesses? Maybe some of them should not be used on ropes that are stretchy or wet? Many questions, no answers.

    • @александрмалышев-в9ь
      @александрмалышев-в9ь Год назад +2

      Никакой узел из перечисленных не используется в альпе

    • @cfvfn12
      @cfvfn12 Год назад +4

      ​@@александрмалышев-в9ь грепвайн используется

    • @александрмалышев-в9ь
      @александрмалышев-в9ь Год назад +1

      @@cfvfn12 да, грейп есть, невнимательно посмотрел

    • @im_buddha
      @im_buddha 5 месяцев назад

      @@cfvfn12 причем еще как используется. и для карабинов и для связывания веревек и для создания петель

  • @TheCherrybuster
    @TheCherrybuster Год назад

    Now I’m a Cub Scout!

  • @wernerzwiener5830
    @wernerzwiener5830 Год назад +4

    3 und 5 sind gleich. Ein Zeppelinknoten.

    • @SpassImGlas
      @SpassImGlas Год назад

      Und beide Male falsch geknotet...

  • @NorThenX047
    @NorThenX047 Год назад +1

    5 just a worse version of 3? 6 was really nice.

  • @jeskoumm
    @jeskoumm Год назад +1

    Rope: why not
    Knot: because.
    Me: 😶....😯
    #handfasting #youwantmoreandyouknowit

  • @ẞãbæ-ā
    @ẞãbæ-ā Месяц назад

    The 600th comment🎉

  • @ẞãbæ-ā
    @ẞãbæ-ā Месяц назад

    Lol i just inevented a new knot making these 😂

  • @Mark-Tan
    @Mark-Tan 9 месяцев назад +1

    I like the 6th

  • @apar1560
    @apar1560 5 месяцев назад

    👍👍👍 NICE

  • @hestergreen2031
    @hestergreen2031 Год назад

    Excellent

  • @Arche0123
    @Arche0123 Год назад +2

    끈 묶는 방법도 여러가지이고 실생활에 요긴하게 사용될 수 있을 거 같습니다.

  • @GetMeThere1
    @GetMeThere1 4 месяца назад

    I like #4 for quick release.

  • @JoJo-JoJo-JoJo
    @JoJo-JoJo-JoJo 7 месяцев назад

    3 & 5 is the Zeppelin knot or Zeppelin Bend.
    A popular sailing knot for securely joining two ropes, which can be loosened relatively easily even after a heavy load. It actually consists of two intertwined simple knots. The commonly accepted name for this knot stems from its alleged use to moor airships.

  • @mammaliturchi54
    @mammaliturchi54 4 дня назад

    molto bello, il problema è ricordarsi

  • @user-zi5lx6lx5k
    @user-zi5lx6lx5k 3 месяца назад

    THE SURGEONS KNOT IS THE STRONGEST BASED ON PULL TEST #6

  • @fjb4932
    @fjb4932 Год назад +1

    They must be using the whole Chinese Peking Philharmonic Orchestra composing that torturous / annoying background noise. Mindnumbing . . . .

  • @viktorbether3942
    @viktorbether3942 Год назад

    *_☑️✔️Ну, зашибись придумано_* 👍🤝👏

  • @gansangshen1113
    @gansangshen1113 9 месяцев назад

    很好,学会了,谢谢

  • @pauswing
    @pauswing Год назад +1

    Nº 6 is the best

  • @markfischer5044
    @markfischer5044 9 месяцев назад

    The fact that the title is "Rope connection knot" and not "Bend" hurts me a little.

  • @WillAlexander-n4o
    @WillAlexander-n4o 5 месяцев назад

    Guess you had better get to testing them. Just saying. And applying them to your daily. Good Luck

  • @spaceman61
    @spaceman61 11 месяцев назад

    Awesome, thanks

  • @metalzonemt-2
    @metalzonemt-2 Год назад

    I can knot believe my eyes.