Gripping sailor's hitch
Appearance
Gripping sailor's hitch | |
---|---|
Category | Hitch |
Related | Sailor's hitch, rolling hitch, Icicle hitch |
Releasing | Non-jamming |
Typical use | 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, in the direction of taper, similar to the Icicle hitch, but superior.[1] It is much superior to the rolling hitch for that purpose.[2] It is similar to the Michoacan-Martin friction knot used in climbing; The finishing wrap for Michoacan-Martin is in the opposite direction of the Gripping Sailors knot, both ends are then made to carry weight.
Tying
-
Make 5 turns around the object at opposite side of to the pull direction of the standing part, then cross the standing part to the pull direction and make one more turn
-
Cross back over the standing part in front, as you change the turn direction to opposite the wraps, come through from the back, and pass under the standing part (following the pen in pic).
-
Tighten up before loading...
-
When pulled to the side opposite the 5 turns, this hitch will hold...
See also
Notelist
- ^ Sometimes incorrectly presented under name Sailor's gripping hitch. It is a gripping version of the Sailor's hitch, not a Sailor's version of a (non-existent) Gripping hitch.
References
- ^ "Sailor's Hitch". Notable Knot Index. Retrieved 24 March 2013.
- ^ "Testing Sailing Knots that Really Grip". Inside Practical Sailor. Belvoir Media Group, LLC. Retrieved 25 December 2016.
External links