scaffold knot

<< First  < Prev   1   2   3   Next >  Last >> 
  • 13 Nov 2012 19:41
    Reply # 1136543 on 680708
    Deleted user
    I find the buntline hitch an easy one to half-remember: It is a clove hitch taken around the standing part of the line. Half-remember because the clove hitch could be tied in two directions, and only one of them is a buntline hitch, the one where the tail is on the inside of the loop.

    The various names are fun, but confusing. Call it the strangle knot, strangle knot, or poacher's noose knot, which appears to be the names I find online for what David showed here and called the scaffold hitch.

    It is a "double overhand" tied around the standing part.

    I also read online that it works in monofilament fishing line (or just about any cordage), so it sounds like a good choice in slick stuff like spectra. I think I've read that the proper buntline hitch can slip in these conditions, although it won't flog open.

    The link to directions for the scaffold hitch in this thread show something with an extra twist and an extra turn put in. This is more complicated than just a "triple overhand" around the standing part. If I tie it around something other than the standing part and then pull that thing out I end up with a knot I can't identify, although it probably has a name too. Looks a little bit constrictor-ish, but isn't quite that either.

    Of course I'm spending time reading about knots instead of setting up rope and tying them right now. Time to sign out and get to work!
  • 10 Sep 2011 00:15
    Reply # 695698 on 680708
    Same knot, different name; same name, different knot; different ships different longsplices.  Ropework is endlessly fascinating.
  • 08 Sep 2011 12:21
    Reply # 694345 on 680708
    I looked up the scaffold knot on a few of the many knot-tiers websites, and one of them says that the scaffold knot is a 3-turn version of my knot, and my knot is a snare knot or strangle knot; and the buntline hitch is something else again. But they all do the same job, as being a semi-permanent, easy to make, hard to undo knot that will not shake loose.
  • 05 Sep 2011 21:55
    Reply # 692528 on 680708
    One of the things that gets me out of bed each morning Tom.:)
  • 05 Sep 2011 16:51
    Reply # 692378 on 691052
    Deleted user
    Gary Pick wrote:Came across this site that explains it all quite well.
    http://knots-guide.blogspot.com/2008/04/scaffold-knot.html



    Exellent! Isn't it a delight that no matter how old you get, there's always something new (to you) that can be learned.

  • 03 Sep 2011 12:07
    Reply # 691289 on 691185
    Annie Hill wrote:OK, all same-same as what I call(ed) a buntline hitch, but I stand corrected, especially as on the same site they have a buntline hitch and it ain't tied like I tie them!
    That buntline is different isn't it?
    Up until now the reef, the bowline and half hitch have been about all I have used...apart from the truckie's hitch for tensioning up a rope on the ute that is. I can see there are a few extras I might have to practice on.
  • 03 Sep 2011 06:38
    Reply # 691185 on 680708
    OK, all same-same as what I call(ed) a buntline hitch, but I stand corrected, especially as on the same site they have a buntline hitch and it ain't tied like I tie them!
  • 02 Sep 2011 23:35
    Reply # 691052 on 680708
    Came across this site that explains it all quite well.
    http://knots-guide.blogspot.com/2008/04/scaffold-knot.html


  • 01 Sep 2011 07:26
    Reply # 689519 on 688870
    Gary Pick wrote:Hey Annie you back in NZ?
    Yup :-D!  Great time: but gaff rig ain't for me - tho' it does look pretty.  Good to be back on Fantail and not much colder than a Nova Scotian summer!. 

  • 31 Aug 2011 09:34
    Reply # 688870 on 680708
    Hey Annie you back in NZ?
<< First  < Prev   1   2   3   Next >  Last >> 
       " ...there is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in junk-rigged boats" 
                                                               - the Chinese Water Rat

                                                              Site contents © the Junk Rig Association and/or individual authors

Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software