Testing Climbing Figure 8s with Hard Is Easy

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  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2024
  • Ben from "HARD IS EASY" collaborated with us after many of you requested it about his figure 8 video found at • Why Figure 8 knot is N... .
    Learn how to tie figure of 8s like a ninja on @Hard Is Easy latest video • How to tie into the ha...
    We pull tested both ways to tie a figure 8 and spoiler alert... it really doesn't make a difference. But it sure is fun to watch shit break! Let us know if you want us to collaborate on future projects and what you want to see.
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Комментарии • 236

  • @HowNOT2
    @HowNOT2  Год назад +1

    Check out our new store! hownot2.store/

  • @AdaptivePrep
    @AdaptivePrep Год назад +26

    Definitely want more HowNot2 and Hard is Easy collabs! You guys both do such a good job. Love the joint projects.

  • @gekquad116
    @gekquad116 4 года назад +115

    A collab I didn’t know I wanted. Sick to see.

  • @HardIsEasy
    @HardIsEasy 4 года назад +184

    Hahaaa you used this beginning :DDD It was a joke.... :DDDD P.s. Thanks for testing this! P.s.s. I have a long list of things to break :DDD

    • @lajosrofusz5826
      @lajosrofusz5826 8 месяцев назад

      You may use pulleys not carabiners

  • @m4573r_
    @m4573r_ 4 года назад +13

    My 2 fav channels collaborating?! I WANT MOAR!!!!

  • @cragbum87
    @cragbum87 4 года назад +4

    Yes please. Collaborate again. This was great.

  • @inferiorquality
    @inferiorquality 4 года назад +2

    Nice collaboration! Stumbled upon Bens video the other day and enjoyed it a lot, thanks for taking it one step further :D

  • @joseraulhernandezhdx.9739
    @joseraulhernandezhdx.9739 4 года назад +1

    The collab I was waiting to seeeeee, thanks for the video Ryan.

  • @BackcountryCamWA
    @BackcountryCamWA 4 года назад +18

    "Tie too short of a tail, YA DIE!" That's what I come here to avoid, thanks as always for the awesome content.

    • @Benlucky13
      @Benlucky13 4 года назад

      i didn't even notice that at first, the tails don't move an inch

  • @misterlarryb
    @misterlarryb 3 года назад +2

    LOLOL- "Why don't they call the overhand a figure 7!" Great humor, great testing with very interesting results. Thanks to both Ben and Ryan!

  • @Zlaez
    @Zlaez 4 года назад +76

    It would be interesting to see how a Yosemite finish stacks up against a normal figure 8... Great work!

    • @ChungusDongus
      @ChungusDongus 4 года назад +2

      My guess would be that it increases the sttrength by .2kn
      So, very little. I think a yosemite finish doesnt add anything to the bend radius, but it might delay the catastrophic pinching that occurs.

    • @zolbly
      @zolbly 4 года назад +5

      I’m pretty curious about this considering I always tie a yosemite finish on my eight

    • @eyescreamcake
      @eyescreamcake 4 года назад +1

      In ruclips.net/video/QAr-uHd8h8o/видео.html it shows Yosemite finish is harder to untie. In vimeo.com/40767916#t=0m36s it shows that it pulls apart easier under ring-loading.

    • @Jh0ac
      @Jh0ac 4 года назад +2

      There's a separate video somewhere on youtube that tests knots too and the yosemite finish ended up being weaker than a regular 8 for those results

    • @2002mitchell
      @2002mitchell 3 года назад +1

      I agree, I always tie a Yosemite finish in my figure 8 when lead climbing. The reason being is that a number of years ago my "stopper knot" got stuck in a quickdraw right at the crux. I thought I was being short-roped by my belayer, but it was just the knot and It was a real pain to get unstuck. The Yosemite solves that (probably rare) problem and is a really neat way to deal with any extra tail. It seems like with that extra strand in there that it should give the knot a greater bend radius and thus greater strength.

  • @shacharniego3335
    @shacharniego3335 4 года назад +25

    It would be interesting to see at what point a figure eight would break crossloaded but with a stoper knot

    • @wulf67
      @wulf67 2 года назад

      I'd endeavor to avoid either scenario.

  • @YannCamusBlissClimbing
    @YannCamusBlissClimbing 4 года назад

    DUDE! Great collab and great testing. Very interesting! Thanks sooo much! :-)

  • @PeterRainer
    @PeterRainer 4 года назад +10

    Great collab - really enjoyed watching both your videos. Over here in Europe the rethreaded double bowline is very popular as a bind-in knot, because it's a lot easier to untie than a figure 8 knot after a lead fall. Would be great to see how this not compares on your slack snap machine :-)

    • @PeterRainer
      @PeterRainer 4 года назад +2

      @HowNOTtoHIGHLINE By the way - the PayPal donation link on your Patreon page is wrong - while the link text is the right one, the link behind it always links to the donators own donation page and donating to myself doesn't make that much sense.

    • @HowNOT2
      @HowNOT2  4 года назад +3

      Thanks! I donate to myself daily when I work haha ;). I'll fix it.

  • @benjaminjohnson4697
    @benjaminjohnson4697 3 года назад +6

    Great work. I love failure analysis, it would probably be difficult or dangerous to be close to the knot, but I think a laser thermometer on the knot would be interesting:)

  • @somehandle
    @somehandle 4 года назад

    Great collaboration, thanks guys! 🙌

  • @MattHew-vp1vl
    @MattHew-vp1vl Год назад

    I completely thought this was hard was easy! Great Collab!

  • @jjwiii1432
    @jjwiii1432 4 года назад +2

    This is incredible. thank you!

  • @victorhall2876
    @victorhall2876 4 года назад +11

    It would be interesting testing a figure 8 against both a double bowline and a rethreaded bowline to see just how strong bowlines are.

  • @robburnett2672
    @robburnett2672 4 года назад

    Both of you are great I like the idea of collaboration especially when the subjects overlap!! Thanks guys

  • @roshtar2k8
    @roshtar2k8 4 года назад +57

    I keep hearing again and again that soap is bad for ropes, but as a chemist, I don't see how. Since you have some leftover rope, I'm wondering if you would do a few tests where you wash a rope in the washing machine line 100 times and see if there is a difference in the strength.

    • @boiledpnutz
      @boiledpnutz 4 года назад +1

      Detergents break down fibers

    • @chrissonnenschein6634
      @chrissonnenschein6634 4 года назад +9

      Soap is bad for natural fiber ropes, but natural is bad when wet anyway. As fir synthetic it really depends on what synthetic compound you are using. Chemically the variety of compounds used for rope fiber all have different physical properties and just guessing that soap “ in combo with sunlight over time “ is the real issue. You’d need to dig in some chemical safety sheets for properties. And once again back when that talk started chances are the “soap” actually being used would have been a strong detergent on a low quality synthetic rope. Not even “detergents” used now are the same as they once were.

    • @tomtom4405
      @tomtom4405 4 года назад +3

      Soap (e.g. sodium palmate and no residual sodium hydroxide) I'm sure is ok, you can even buy products for washing rope but the concern is if I use some kind of stain removing laundry detergent what's in it beyond soap. Not knowing is good reason not to do it. I remember hearing about a fatal incident (rope access) where the rope was chemically damaged on a chimney job. The abseil/rappel rope and shunt rope were the same (2 halves of same rope) and both failed under the workers bodyweight. Look after your rope!

    • @johnnycigar3240
      @johnnycigar3240 4 года назад +1

      ropes break washing machines

    • @chrissonnenschein6634
      @chrissonnenschein6634 4 года назад +1

      johnny cigar By placing them loose so they wrap around the agitator would be a yes (even if you tied the tails together). but one would place in a knit drawbag wouldn’t one (similar for how you wash linens) no? Or the overhand slip knot chain method like used on power cords, but then how clean would the rope really get?

  • @slyandsmart
    @slyandsmart 3 года назад

    such a beautiful collab!!!
    i love both of your channels!!!!

  • @jacobwall33860
    @jacobwall33860 2 года назад

    When I did CSR my one buddy always did a safety knot with his tail after making finger eights. We used them for everything though. Anchors, belays, main line systems. I’m a big fan of them. Thanks for the great content as always.

  • @MNCPMSteve
    @MNCPMSteve 2 года назад

    Collaborations with Ben, love to see 😎👍

  • @thecanopyclimber
    @thecanopyclimber 4 года назад +2

    That intro!!! 😂 thanks for doing these tests 🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻

  • @Deeraise
    @Deeraise 4 года назад +3

    Just seeing this channel; love the content. When I first learned climbing I was always taught to tie stopper knots at the end of the tail to keep the figure 8 from unraveling. It'd be interesting if you were able to test the strength of the rope with stopper knots/the stopper knots themselves. If you've already done that my apologies for missing it. Cheers!

  • @va7oloko
    @va7oloko 4 года назад +6

    No Yosemite finish tested from the Yosemite climber?? xD thx for the video Ryan!

  • @pij3333
    @pij3333 3 года назад +8

    That "shorter" tail was still plenty long, would be interesting to see how much force it takes to pull a 5cm or 7cm tail through

    • @kd5nrh
      @kd5nrh Год назад +1

      I'm just happy to know that I have to be careful to not let the 8 become crossloaded, so that after that 24kN yank, the empty harness can still be hanging from the 12mm winch line I was apparently being belayed on by a bulldozer. Makes finding the pieces my body was ripped into easier if they have the harness as a starting point.

  • @atomo8730
    @atomo8730 4 года назад +1

    loved the collaboration!

  • @danielelizeu4239
    @danielelizeu4239 3 года назад

    MELHOR Canal do RUclips.!
    Melhor forma de mostrar para as pessoas não morrem por falta da informação técnica de verdade .
    Ao vivo e a cores !
    Obrigado.
    Parabéns pela inciativa.

  • @elonmusk452
    @elonmusk452 4 года назад +38

    Can we just appreciate how stretchy climbing ropes are.

    • @Mike-oz4cv
      @Mike-oz4cv 4 года назад +4

      My half ropes are specified for 33% dynamic stretch (and that’s with only a 50kg test mass). It’s always a bit scary when you’ve climbed 40 or 50m and you realize that you’d easily “fall” >10m just from rope stretch alone. On the other hand it makes you stop worrying about being half a meter above the last quickdraw or using 60cm alpine slings. And of course it makes for a nice, soft catch.

  • @Rorschach147
    @Rorschach147 4 года назад +5

    Id love to see normal cams tested in slightly offset placements! Like back lobes slightly overcammed with the front ones at a perfect angle.

  • @imaginedauthority9455
    @imaginedauthority9455 2 года назад

    This channel always makes me feel really good about my choice of DMM steel screwgates...

  • @JoshyLook18
    @JoshyLook18 4 года назад +2

    Thanks für this very nice video. It would be interesting to see some other knots in comparison.
    What abaut tying two ropes together? Which knot realy is strong? Butterfly, Fisherman, Overhand, Figure8(straight/sideways), some more....

  • @HondoTrailside
    @HondoTrailside 3 года назад

    I was taught to tie in the right way, which is also easier, back in the 70s. I was told the right way was 80% strand strength, and the wrong way was 65% strand strength. Apparently not so dramatic a difference in these tests, not that one expects nice round percentages to be dead on. I was lucky to be briefly in a club with an engineer who worked with the UIAA, and he later wrote their book on ropes.
    I was a little surprised to see that most RUclips instructors recommend not thinking about this knot polarity issue, as their main concern is getting people to tie a figure of 8 correctly at all. Either method will stop that sinking feeling, but it is closer even than I had been told.
    The reason I was told that the one way was stronger than the other was that it was tied so that the load line's first reversal is around a 3 strand radius, and not a two strand radius. This is a factor I incorporate in a lot of knots, and there are some not knot ways of incorporating it also. But as your test also shows, there is more to it than that as the knot is basically unstable when loaded, if tied incorrectly. The thing about that though, is how by the time it blows, either knot has seated into a form where it has moved into a more advantageous position. So maybe it is the radius issue after all.

  • @amoledor
    @amoledor 3 года назад +1

    Got it, If I ever cross load 5,241.6 lbs, I'll die. Good thing no one weighs that.

  • @wesleyanderson3587
    @wesleyanderson3587 4 года назад +1

    You should give an updated tour of the museum of slack

  • @eduardolara4467
    @eduardolara4467 6 месяцев назад

    Where can I see the Spreadsheet with all the data?

  • @FlipBookWorks
    @FlipBookWorks 4 года назад +3

    Mad respect for the 2 of you! What's the conclusion though? That it doesn't matter how you tie your figure eight, the breaking strength more or less remains the same?

    • @michaelpetepiece4566
      @michaelpetepiece4566 4 года назад +2

      The breaking strength remains about the same, but in the companion video Ben showed pretty clearly that the "proper" figure 8 with the load strand on the inside of the knot is much easier to untie when subjected to normal climbing loads.

    • @eeeeee9000
      @eeeeee9000 3 года назад

      Yeah lol

  • @Katsura_Otoko
    @Katsura_Otoko 4 года назад +2

    Keep the dad jokes alive!! Lmao

  • @NoName-OG1
    @NoName-OG1 4 года назад

    So glad this ended up here!

  • @kkww5034
    @kkww5034 4 года назад

    Thank you for the video and knowledge

  • @minorswinghammocks5556
    @minorswinghammocks5556 3 года назад

    do you have a breaking test of figure 8 vs bowline?

  • @interestedinstuff
    @interestedinstuff 3 года назад

    Sweet. Another groovy channel. Thanks for your work. I'm in Australia so I'm not sure how much I can support your coffee...

  • @outdoorwoodchipps3107
    @outdoorwoodchipps3107 4 года назад

    Good cooperation! Jeep on going.

  • @moneymaken9232
    @moneymaken9232 4 года назад +3

    Now double bowline verse figure 8

    • @paulschweissbrenner
      @paulschweissbrenner 4 года назад +1

      Yes, please do a double bowline. But consider that there also many ways to tie this knot (inside/outside/over/under).
      Thank you for all of your work!!👍

  • @NoName-OG1
    @NoName-OG1 4 года назад

    That guy with hard is easy at the beginning of this vid has a very good explanation of the F8 in his full vid - it will change your mind on stuff....

  • @intosiberiaadventures1217
    @intosiberiaadventures1217 4 года назад

    Thaks for test! And special for open data test results! What about ringloading for kalmyk loop vs holland bowline

  • @taylorkrosbakken5214
    @taylorkrosbakken5214 4 года назад +1

    Colab was awesome. Would love to see an even shorter tail figure 8 so it actually pulls through.

    • @mylesclarke7178
      @mylesclarke7178 3 года назад

      I had this exact same thought. If the tail pulls through the 8, would it still hold some amount of force? Ie. 10 kn-ish. There's probably a video out there already, I just haven't found it yet.

  • @floripasstso1021
    @floripasstso1021 3 года назад

    how strong is a double bowline knot vs. a figure eight knot

  • @AerialCarlian
    @AerialCarlian Год назад

    Please test crossloading the strains! Like an Alpine Butterfly, but a figure 8. Pretty Please!!! Love the channel!

  • @DrPsychlops
    @DrPsychlops 3 года назад

    I am watching these videos to increase my faith in climbing equipment.

  • @sethm7761
    @sethm7761 2 года назад +1

    Would you mind testing a figure-eight on a Yosemite finish (figure-eight follow through)? Might be interesting to see what happens there

  • @Mike-oz4cv
    @Mike-oz4cv 4 года назад +1

    In a lead climbing fall, where is the rope most likely to break? At the knot or at the first quickdraw? What about sharp rock edges?

    • @Benlucky13
      @Benlucky13 4 года назад

      a knot will almost always be the weakest point of any rope, barring any other factors. sharp edges can cut rope under loads as small as body-weight in the right conditions

  • @TonySpinach
    @TonySpinach 3 года назад

    8:59 "Look, a scrunchee" XD

  • @AllenMorris3
    @AllenMorris3 3 года назад

    I would like to see what you can load the rope and still untie it (without a sledge).

  • @staleyexplores
    @staleyexplores 4 года назад +1

    That sure does look like a 9.9 black diamond rope....I could be wrong though.

  • @tobiaszpasterski481
    @tobiaszpasterski481 11 месяцев назад

    Interesting experiment !!

  • @sebastiangantz2785
    @sebastiangantz2785 4 года назад

    You have an old guidebook for Sächsische Schweiz on your shelf? wow, how comes that?

  • @randybradley7427
    @randybradley7427 3 года назад

    Great job and very interesting

  • @chadgoyette33
    @chadgoyette33 2 года назад

    What does a figure 8 with Yosemite finish break at?

  • @LucasdaMatta
    @LucasdaMatta 2 года назад

    Thanks!

  • @mapleknot3
    @mapleknot3 3 года назад

    What's the manufacturers listed breaking strength of that rope?

  • @awggie
    @awggie 4 года назад

    Good collab!

  • @mangowett9967
    @mangowett9967 3 года назад

    Love it!!

  • @warrenhennig4482
    @warrenhennig4482 4 года назад

    Great stuff!

  • @mrdna7936
    @mrdna7936 2 года назад

    Wouldn’t tying a “stop knot” or “safety knot” stop the tails from sliding if you cross load a figure 8 ?

  • @marting7181
    @marting7181 3 года назад

    I beleive the open source lab results are not anymore available on your website?!

  • @LOogt
    @LOogt 4 года назад

    At 12:19 I was expecting you to say "so finish it with a barrel knot" haha

  • @Wade970
    @Wade970 4 года назад

    So much curiosity about other knots, and ropes... Will the slack snap break 3/4” amsteel + with class II eyes splice?

  • @swartzautoman2
    @swartzautoman2 4 года назад

    What's the song at the end

  • @paypwnz
    @paypwnz 4 года назад

    can you do the same test with a bowline knot?

  • @John-eq8cu
    @John-eq8cu 3 года назад

    I really wanted to see the strength of a figure8 'bunny ears' knot, where you take a bight through and loop it over the knot, giving you two loops to clip into. THis is handy for getting two independent loops for your two toprope biners, or to have a master-point plus a tie-in point.
    My guess: each of the two bunny ears would be as strong as a single one.

  • @wolverinekut
    @wolverinekut 4 года назад

    Great job 👍💯

  • @tomtom4405
    @tomtom4405 4 года назад

    When tying in with a fig 8 I always leave a tail and tie a barrel knot in the tail round the load strand. Done it for last 28 years of climbing and never seen anyone else do it (other than for industrial access work). Seeing that tail slip when loop-pulling I feel happier that it's not just a silly superstition of mine and it's actually a good thing to do. Maybe the added barrel knot is a Yosemite finish to the 8 ;)

    • @PeterRainer
      @PeterRainer 4 года назад +1

      One can obviously do that but it's not necessary for a figure eight because once pulled tight it doesn't roll - it might tighten by another 5cm (2in) but if your tail is at least 10cm (4 in) long it's safe enough even without this stopper or barrel knot

    • @GodzillaGoesGaga
      @GodzillaGoesGaga 3 года назад

      Everyone at my gym does this. It's pretty standard in CA. Mainly because the gyms have insurance dudes who don't know what the fuck they are talking about and think 2 is better than one !!

  • @brookeusii
    @brookeusii 4 года назад

    Excellent

  • @DJthumpDJ
    @DJthumpDJ 4 года назад +1

    Could you pls test the figure of 9? and figure of 8 with the tail re-threaded?
    I suspect that the tail re-threaded will make the know much stronger - as it will make the bend radius of the load strand larger

  • @armedbear529
    @armedbear529 4 года назад

    “Didn’t grunt enough.”

  • @50StichesSteel
    @50StichesSteel 4 года назад

    Wonder what happens if you cross load a figure 8 with a stopper knot? Is it kind of safe?

  • @jameshougen9763
    @jameshougen9763 4 года назад

    Can you guys break a few types of quickdraws?

  • @cunderwood1992
    @cunderwood1992 4 года назад +1

    'cross loading' the figure eight is called 'ring loading'

  • @gregrobertsonjr8773
    @gregrobertsonjr8773 3 года назад

    Another one of your videos I would love to see done on static line as well.

  • @frenchfree
    @frenchfree 4 года назад

    Could you test a double bowline which is many peoples second choice, or at least the other option.

  • @staibock5456
    @staibock5456 4 года назад +12

    I would love to see a test of the problem of rolling when you connect two ropes for rappel with a figure of eight compared to two overhand knots, greetings from switzerland :)

    • @red90rover98
      @red90rover98 4 года назад +1

      Use a double fishermans when connecting two ropes.

    • @staibock5456
      @staibock5456 4 года назад +3

      @@red90rover98 yes and no, works great but gets stuck easier, two overhand is aswell save

    • @heli400
      @heli400 4 года назад

      Red90rover 🤔 I wonder how well a figure eight would fare if the tails were on opposite ends like the double fisher mans? 🤔

    • @staibock5456
      @staibock5456 4 года назад

      @@heli400 you don't have the problem of rolling anymore, i hear people telling it's ok to use like that

    • @heli400
      @heli400 4 года назад

      @@staibock5456 I figured as much, because the knot would just tighten on itself like the fishermans, probably get stuck easier tho :/

  • @jdryak
    @jdryak 2 года назад

    Wonderfully insightful from both of you! Wish you would continue the collaboration: 1 + 1 = 3 (synergy of thought and creativity). Best wishes, and thanks! Fun to see two different, but equally intriguing personalities styles and approaches at work together! : )

  • @olegx.8173
    @olegx.8173 4 года назад +1

    I expected the rope wit figure 8 to loose 25-30% of it's strength as they say in most literature, but in these tests it surprisingly lost around 45%. How can you explain tis disparity?

  • @EDC_Soldier
    @EDC_Soldier 3 года назад

    How about a two-loop figure eight versus a figure eight?

  • @beckejc
    @beckejc 4 года назад

    I would like to see you test normal paracord with various configurations and knots. I would also like to see variant brands tested, from the perceived best to the stretchiest. I would like it compared to dyneema of a comparable diameter and or strength.
    If you double a loop for instance is that twice the strength? Triple. hold it in a web-lock?
    Nets would be really hard to test. However, ...

  • @Pyromaniac2450
    @Pyromaniac2450 3 года назад

    What about a Yosemite finish? Does that weaken the figure 8 at all?

  • @petar-boshnakov
    @petar-boshnakov 4 года назад

    You haven't done the zeppelin bend yet ?? I went through the excel and couldn't find it. Also you can try the zeppelin loop. It would be interesting to see how it compares. Also interesting to see how easy/hard it would be to undo afterwards. Thanks a lot guys

  • @gregknipe8772
    @gregknipe8772 2 года назад

    explains the times a fig 8 broke hauling a car out of the snow. never knew about orientation of load strand.

  • @missingNtelis
    @missingNtelis 3 года назад +1

    Don't leave the blade exposed at any time. Your cat may have jumped on that stool :)

  • @evanlovleymeyers4781
    @evanlovleymeyers4781 4 года назад

    Watching the cross load was interesting i knew that they roll out but would you do different ways people join ropes for rappel. Euro death, double fish, figure 8?

  • @handduggraverdronline
    @handduggraverdronline Год назад

    Does that kitten do any slack line

  • @j616s
    @j616s 4 года назад +2

    At what point does the fig-8 loop fold over? 23kN is really high. If the folds at a force that's also really high, it might not be something to worry about in the real world?

    • @johnsoplete
      @johnsoplete 4 года назад

      I'm also super intrigued, it didn't even undo with short tail at 23kN. Wouldn't just longer tail or backup knot make it very useful?

    • @miguelgazquez5717
      @miguelgazquez5717 3 года назад

      I think the problem is that a lot of small chock even with low forces can undo it with time

  • @elonmusk452
    @elonmusk452 4 года назад

    How much strength comes from the grunt?

  • @arq.diegoriva
    @arq.diegoriva 3 года назад

    13kn Normal y 23kn mal usado... entendí bien? soporta más si se usa mal? (si entendí que se corre por eso no es seguro)

  • @haphaeu
    @haphaeu 4 года назад

    Breaking or pulling out some pitons, knife blades, arrows would be cool to see!

  • @alex333sh
    @alex333sh 4 года назад

    If you cross load figure 8 (the last test), would a stopper knot save you? or even just tying a figure 8 stopper at the end of the short end (that would slip out in this situation?)

  • @bt5294
    @bt5294 Год назад

    I want to see the Yosemite finish with figure 8 as well as double bowline