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  2. Rope splicing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rope_splicing

    Chain splice – Attached the working end of a rope to a chain. [7] Figure-eight "splice" knot – A splice-like bend knot used for joining two ropes. Horseshoe splice – A cut splice where the two sides of the loop are of unequal length. Long splice – A splice used to join two rope ends forming one rope the length of the total of the two ropes.

  3. Figure-eight knot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figure-eight_knot

    The name figure-of-eight knot appears in Lever's Sheet Anchor; or, a Key to Rigging (London, 1808). The word "of" is nowadays usually omitted. The word "of" is nowadays usually omitted. The knot is the sailor's common single-strand stopper knot and is tied in the ends of tackle falls and running rigging, unless the latter is fitted with monkey ...

  4. Eye splice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_splice

    The eye splice is a method of creating a permanent loop (an "eye") in the end of a rope by means of rope splicing. The Flemish eye is a type of circular loop at the end of a thread. There are several techniques of creating the eye with its knot tied back to the line, rope or wire.

  5. Fid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fid

    In addition to holding rope open to assist the creation of a rope splice, modern push fids have markings for precise measurements in a variety of sizes of rope. The length of these fids is typically 21 or 22 times the diameter of rope to be spliced. A one-half-inch (12.7 mm) diameter rope would have any accompanying fid 10.5–11 in (266.7 ...

  6. List of knots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_knots

    Granny knot – secures a rope or line around an object; Grief knot – (what knot) combines features of granny knot and thief knot; Gripping sailor's hitch – used to tie one rope to another, or a rope to a pole, when the pull is lengthwise along the object; Ground-line hitch – attaches a rope to an object

  7. Chain sinnet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chain_sinnet

    A chain sinnet (or chain sennit) is a method of shortening a rope or other cable while in use or for storage. It is formed by making a series of simple crochet -like stitches in the line. [ 1 ] It can also reduce tangling while a rope is being washed in a washing machine.

  8. Eskimo bowline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eskimo_bowline

    Under cross load (ring loading, transverse loading profile), i.e. when the loop is pulled apart, the shown common Eskimo loop effectively mimics an ends-opposite (and inferior) left-hand sheet bend and thus can slip like the bowline; the less common Eskimo loop variant with the A–C loop (see bowline family diagram) would give a proper same ...

  9. Monkey's fist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey's_fist

    an ornamental monkey's fist with a hard eye splice, custom-made at the chandlers Arthur Beale. The monkey's fist is a spherical covering with six surface parts presenting a regular over-one-and-under-one weave. This weave is commonly doubled or tripled to present an appearance that superficially resembles a Turk's-head. Like the Turk's-head ...