Kalmyk Loop

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  • Опубликовано: 1 фев 2023
  • How to tie the Kalmyk Loop Knot.

Комментарии • 71

  • @NotCreative479
    @NotCreative479 Год назад +16

    Was seriously telling my gf I needed to learn knots more. Found you scrolling and subbed. I've only seen 2 of your videos but picked up each knot on the first go. Now I'm driving her crazy attaching para cord to everything in the house lol ty

    • @txtoolcrib
      @txtoolcrib  Год назад +6

      That’s great lol. It’s a skill that will prove invaluable when you need it.

    • @13Voodoobilly69
      @13Voodoobilly69 Год назад +3

      Sounds just like me!🤣. My father was a knot tying guru and now that I am older I see applications all the time where knot tying skills help wonderfully in life.

    • @thehamburglar9mm
      @thehamburglar9mm 11 месяцев назад +2

      Did you tie her up yet?

  • @cat-pd1di
    @cat-pd1di Год назад +2

    I watched your youtube version of this knot and gave up ....this version I got it on the 2nd try! thanks for your videos

  • @KeepItSwift
    @KeepItSwift 2 месяца назад

    Really appreciate your vids.
    Hopefully, the shorts can spread some awareness.
    This one is the quick-release Eskimo Bowline, as you mentioned on your channel. Both are not mentioned in Ashley's book of knots, but are found in its Russian equivalent. It is rather secure making it my fav quick-release fixed loop. There is also the one hand and the snap technique to form the loop in seconds.

  • @itsallinthehead
    @itsallinthehead 4 месяца назад

    Your explanation is simply perfect. Thank you very much indeed!

  • @koh9894
    @koh9894 11 месяцев назад +1

    Great knot. Thanks. Non-binding knots are fantastic. Quick-release knots are cool but I'm less likely to use this one than the Alpine Butterfly. Still, this is a beautiful knot. Adding to what I practice. thanks again.

  • @Open5to6
    @Open5to6 Год назад +3

    Ur my favorite how-to knot guy on YT.
    Request: How to tie knots while rope is under tension.

    • @13Voodoobilly69
      @13Voodoobilly69 Год назад

      Look up the Midshipman’s Hitch. It’s an easy to tie knot with lots of uses. It is often called the Taut line hitch.

  • @alexbondarev8986
    @alexbondarev8986 Месяц назад

    you kill this knot!

  • @davidlee6461
    @davidlee6461 Год назад +1

    Quick method, better than before, thanks Ben!

  • @Steve-0220
    @Steve-0220 Год назад +10

    Sure looks a lot like a "slip"bowline to me. I like it

    • @thewaywardwanderer7249
      @thewaywardwanderer7249 Год назад +1

      Maybe I'm tying it wrong, as I haven't looked up a "slip bowline" yet, but, when pulling the working end of *my* slip bowline (I'm just adding a bite on the working end of a standard bowline), it results in an overhand knot around the object, whereas the Kalmyk loop pulls free

    • @thewaywardwanderer7249
      @thewaywardwanderer7249 Год назад

      After watching a couple more videos, I have found that the difference is the direction you feed the working end through the "ignition on" loop on the standing end.
      The start of a bowline would create an overhand knot, whereas the Kalmyk loop just starts with a loop in the working end.
      From the perspective in this video, the working end goes through the loop: under, then over,
      where a bowline knot would go through the loop the opposite way: over, then under

    • @muhammadzazulirizki1000
      @muhammadzazulirizki1000 8 месяцев назад

      Kalmyk loop is basically an easy release version of Eskimo bowline

    • @Steve-0220
      @Steve-0220 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@muhammadzazulirizki1000 even an old Scoutmaster doesn't know All the knots in "The Ashley Book of Knots."
      BUT, we're always looking for new ones.
      The only one I never taught was the Hangman's Knot since it has No USEFUL Purpose.

  • @jayprojects9693
    @jayprojects9693 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks. I almost always got an unsecure imposter with the hand wrap method; not sure I'd trust this one, but good to know just in case.

  • @happivaras
    @happivaras Год назад +2

    Nice
    A bowline with a (twist)😉

  • @brianwalker5937
    @brianwalker5937 Год назад +19

    Would love to see real life applications and why a particular knot is chosen over alternatives

    • @NulodPBall
      @NulodPBall Год назад +1

      I would just use a modified bowline because I already know that knot.
      Just snug it down properly.

    • @NulodPBall
      @NulodPBall Год назад

      But I actually like a modified clove hitch if I'm attaching to a hard point.
      I already know it.
      There are about 3 variations and only 1 holds tight with no loose lays.

    • @Battleship1996
      @Battleship1996 Год назад +2

      Horses.

    • @powerplay8355
      @powerplay8355 Год назад

      I know, isn't it amazing that these knot tying fools haven't worked that out yet?

  • @visavispacemnc9019
    @visavispacemnc9019 Год назад

    Super easy. Nice thank you.

  • @jimiwasteland3360
    @jimiwasteland3360 Год назад

    Great!

  • @senatorjosephmccarthy2720
    @senatorjosephmccarthy2720 Год назад +2

    Thanks. But I believe you are calling the standing end as working end and vice versa. The left side line is going to do the work.

    • @adamreznik6374
      @adamreznik6374 Год назад +3

      No, the standing end takes the load, (and does the "work" as you say) but it is not the working end. The working end is the end that is worked with, also known as the bitter end. A curve in the line that does not cross itself is a bight (not bite). If it crosses itself it is a loop.

  • @Zendukai
    @Zendukai 10 месяцев назад

    I've subbed to this channel, I dunno what it is about knots, maybe in a previous life I had a lot to do with them, I use mostly ratchet straps lol. I like to know the knot names and especially I would like to see what you would use these for, and, put the load under load and watch, how well you ... easily undo them.

  • @Sunyiri
    @Sunyiri 10 месяцев назад

    ⚡💡⚡

  • @S85B50Engine
    @S85B50Engine Месяц назад

    So basically like a modified Bowline right?

  • @joshualux8309
    @joshualux8309 7 месяцев назад

    You have pass the working end all the through the loop?

  • @vwr32jeep
    @vwr32jeep Год назад +1

    Oh, that’s slick.

  • @That70sChannel
    @That70sChannel Год назад +1

    It's a bowlin with a release built in.

    • @thewaywardwanderer7249
      @thewaywardwanderer7249 Год назад

      It's not though. A bowline with a release results in an overhand knot around the object when the bight is pulled. The Kalmyk pulls free.

  • @scottc3165
    @scottc3165 Год назад

    That's a cool one, but a better one, I think, is a bank robbers knot. I use it for iffy horses that i don't want to kill me in a trailer.

  • @pauldean8638
    @pauldean8638 Год назад

    I prefer the highway hitch ( not the one others are now calling it which it isn’t ) the original hitch . Its design a horse could fully pull on but takes two finger effort to undo

  • @MsVasia123
    @MsVasia123 Год назад

    Its make with one hand

  • @GavinKing_AKA_plumpNation
    @GavinKing_AKA_plumpNation Год назад +1

    Is it an Eskimo bowline with a quick release?
    Doesn't look like it: ruclips.net/video/UbRDGe9pmmU/видео.html
    Thanks for the video

    • @muhammadzazulirizki1000
      @muhammadzazulirizki1000 8 месяцев назад

      It is an quick release version of Eskimo bowline. But the one on this video is how it looks like from behind

  • @charleypetty6242
    @charleypetty6242 Год назад

    Should be high school standard to know these basic knots.

  • @yuriizahorenko1657
    @yuriizahorenko1657 Месяц назад

    Bad result. You did not from the final knot interposition.

  • @sO_RoNerY
    @sO_RoNerY Год назад

    Ugh. Everyone wants a fast release instead of a secure knot. I doubt fast release knots are reliable.

  • @DanielRamirez-go7kc
    @DanielRamirez-go7kc Год назад

    As a truck driver i use this tie when i have freight on the nose of my trailer( no dock) i use this tie to strap pallet and forklift to pulled it off lol

    • @thehamburglar9mm
      @thehamburglar9mm 11 месяцев назад

      Now was that a real lol or a fake lol?

  • @paulcrave3112
    @paulcrave3112 Год назад

    Great knot I need to remember.
    I went to the garage and tied it over and over again, from both the left and the right.
    How can I save this video to my library or something?

    • @NulodPBall
      @NulodPBall Год назад

      Hit the Share icon,
      Select the Copy icon,
      Paste the link into an email or any file that you can save.
      I use an email folder to access knot links from anywhere,
      I also use an app on my phone called ColorNotes also (check box mode) because it's quick and easy to use, and it stores my info online so I can recover the files if I change phones.

    • @tempestive1
      @tempestive1 Год назад +1

      Or send it to yourself over signal, whatsapp, telegram, etc

    • @juniorlopez8205
      @juniorlopez8205 Год назад

      If you're viewing shorts on your phone, look at the right side of the screen with options to share, comment, etc... Below that is a pic of the video creator. Click on it. It'll pop up another screen with the vid as well as the option to save it

    • @NulodPBall
      @NulodPBall Год назад

      @@juniorlopez8205 Junior, that only saves the "sounds" from the shorts video.
      Not really sure why you'd want to do that unless you want to create your own video and want to steal their soundtrack.
      Pretty useless to the average viewer.

    • @NulodPBall
      @NulodPBall Год назад +1

      ​@@juniorlopez8205 I decided to follow the. "Sounds" rabbit-hole, and if you save in "Sounds" you can jump to your library, open up saved Sounds, and from that list, click on the 3 dots on the right, then save the video in one of your personal RUclips categories... Now that I can do, if I care enough to do that many clicks... Jeesh, what a pain.

  • @mostafae
    @mostafae Год назад

    This is wonderful.
    Basically, a bowline with the working end looped through as a bight rather than an end, right?
    Been teaching my daughters knots and they’re really enjoying it. Thanks for passing down useful knowledge in an easy way.

    • @mostafae
      @mostafae Год назад +1

      I stand corrected. Saw your other video on a quick release bowline. They’re in fact different.
      It seems the pinching loop forms on the inside of the main loop rather than on the outside/standing end like a bowline.

    • @muhammadzazulirizki1000
      @muhammadzazulirizki1000 8 месяцев назад

      It's a quick release version of Eskimo bowline, not regular bowline

  • @user-zq3nl9vb9w
    @user-zq3nl9vb9w Год назад

    消防。モアイ結びですね

  • @mistercommythecomrade7920
    @mistercommythecomrade7920 Год назад +2

    You lost me at the second step

    • @RErnie-gv1hv
      @RErnie-gv1hv Год назад +1

      Knots - simple and overly complicated at the same time. A Master Chief Boatswain's Mate went nuts trying to get me to understand knots during Boot Camp.