Комментарии:
Deceptive and misleading title. Besides the bowline, none of the other two are in the top three most used knots. Also, the way the bowline was made makes it very dangerous. The tip is WAY too short.
ОтветитьLike any knot nerd I know all three of these, but every method was new to me! I hope the guy who says #2 isn't an alpine butterfly explains further (unless OP can), but with some practice it might be faster than my already quick method. I'm sure the bowline on a bight can get faster than my current method. The bowline I can tie at least three different ways already, so I'll learn this one but don't think it will win on speed. Great method for teaching though, and a nice lead in to teach the related sheet bend. Thanks for the vid, subbed!
Ответитьузлы: двойной проводник, прямой проводник и булинь
ОтветитьHlo sir that's not butterfly knot check carefully guys fake butterfly knot you make different😢
ОтветитьThanks alot
ОтветитьGostei do vídeo
ОтветитьNice ❤❤❤
ОтветитьHow is knot #2 unsafe?
ОтветитьWhy no narration?
Ответитьひもとってくるっ
ОтветитьThe first one can be done in a less complicated manner. The second one which the author doesn't name is a "butterfly" knot and can be done much faster, differently. The last one is ok...but the remaining small tip inside the loop must be oriented in the opposite direction so as to not interfere. All knots can be done differently but some are downright made complicated.
ОтветитьI think the most tied knot is, at least here in portugal, the overhand. You can do literally almost anything with it, being a secure knot - but you'll need to sacrifice cordage because you'll need to cut it since once loaded with weight it's hard to untie. I spend 30 years knowing just that one knot. My cowboy cousin who has been in the business for over ten years knows only the overhand and the half hitch. These two knots are enough.
One overhand is a stopper knot. Used on two rope's ends it joins any piece of string of the same size. Tie the knot on the end of a rope, tie another overhand behind it and you have a Jam knot for tightening things. Pull the tip back through the knot to create a loop, hence an allpurpose loops for holding bales of hay. Tie two together in the right way and you have a square knot, which is very secure (same as shoelaces, but without the slipped end)
But to be honest, I changed my life, and those around me by learning the trucker's hitch. It's a self tightening knot useful for tensioning rope properly, and tying down loads. Put a toggle in the hitch and you have a marlinspike hitch, usefull for pulling rope by grabbing the toggle instead, making it far easier.
That second knot it dangerous, the Alpine butterfly is far stronger, and people should be tying that instead.
😮😮😮😮
ОтветитьHello ❤
Ответить素晴らしい( ´∀` )b❕
ОтветитьKnot porn music. I like it
ОтветитьThe most common daily knot is a doubly slipped reef knot. You do tie your shoelaces, don't you?
ОтветитьNice but you should demonstrate the purpose and a situation where the know is used. Also exactly how you go about tying it in a real situation.
ОтветитьLose the stupid music.
ОтветитьКрасиво показано, понятно без слов! Спасибо!
Ответитьvery good camerawork, but what's with the shitty computer generated noise? when I watch a video like this , I shouldn't have to hit the mute button to avoid a repetitive mind-numbing audio distraction that adds NOTHING to the value of the video. You shouldn't edit a knot tying demonstration video into a Hollywood MTV style music video entertainment production. It's just plain STUPID!
ОтветитьПоследний узел , кажется, бу-линь.
ОтветитьAWESOME! I specialy love the way You're tiyng the Bowline. I agree with comments below, the Butterfly is not the Alpine exactly, but as long as We know that, it still a good easy and fast knot to know. Thank You very much for sharing. Greetings from France ^_^
ОтветитьKnot #2 is a false butterfly and is very dangerous to teach it as a real butterfly or alpine butterfly knot.
Ответить?
ОтветитьKnot #2 is better described as the " false" butterfly knot which distinguishes it from the "alpine" version of the butterfly knot.
Cheers