Anonymous wrote:
Already mentioned for lifting a slick tapered mast:
The icycle hitch
Worth trying!
My understanding is that the icicle hitch would not be appropriate in this situation. Lifting a mast involves holding the weight of the mast from initial lift-off to eventual set-down, i.e. a continuous, constant load. The instructions for the icicle hitch stress that there will be an initial movement of the hitch when taking up the load, so repeated unloading and re-loading of the hitch is likely to involve incremental slip due to repetition of this initial movement on re-tightening.
Looking at the layout of the hitch, it consists of several parallel turns around the base item, which provide an initial (weak) grip for the second part of the hitch to pull against during the initial load take-up. This second part consists of two diagonal sections of the rope, running in opposite directions. During the initial tightening these two diagonals then act in the manner of a Lewis (aka Lewisson - see Wikipedia), used by masons for lifting heavy stone blocks, and which relies on a necessarily constant longitudinal force to maintain the friction required to prevent slipping of the gripped object. The stronger the longitudinal force, the greater the gripping force, and hence the greater the friction. And this is how the icicle hitch can achieve the seemingly impossible of gripping on a smooth, adversely tapering object, as suggested by its name.