Show off them splices

I may have to place an order for some T Rex & Tenex Tec really soon! I just happen to have 60-70' of the 3/8" in my rope bins. My next project (finish tomorrow) is a 3 Beast X ring w/ 1" Tenex, it is a Beast! Photos tomorrow afternoon! 75% complete.
 
rope was cut on the ground 25ft short of the splice so I spliced an eye in this four year old PI
25677381143_e6bb0f9ff7_z.jpg
 
Anybody have experience splicing All Gears 11.5 climbing rope? I believe its a DB class 1.

I tried to put an eye on it the other day, but when I extracted the core there was another core inside. Kind of 3 strand

braid and when I put a fid into the core the 3 strand bunched up inside. Is there any info out there about this rope?
Spliced a used blue craze recently, tachyon splice only with a wire fid
 
Im not a big fan of the wire fid. I'll use it if I have to but most of the time I use a size or two smaller tubular fid to push the core into the cover.
 
I've never used a wire fid, not sure how I would set that up.
A push fid will never make it through 24 strand Double Braid, or 16 strand. Push Fids are most helpful for hollow braids, or simply as a measurement tool only for 16 and 24 strand ropes.

The first Wire Fid I ever made was using a coat hanger. It was a poor choice since the coating caught fibers terribly. A piano string of similar diameter will be much more friendly. There are many sources for wire of the appropriate gauge.

For most 24s Double Braids, all you need to do is:

- Take about 40" section of wire and fold it in half, to make it 20" overall. Do not crimp the fold super tight, rather, make the bend around something like a nail (1.5 mm or so).
- Next is to form the free ends of the wire around a ring or thimble to create an attachment point to pull the fid from. Whether using a ring or thimble, the means of connection is not unlike that of a soft cable wrap in a tree...pass the wire around the ring and begin forming turns around the standing part.
- Cover all the turns up with tape to prevent any snags from happening and you should be left with about an 18" Wire Pull Fid.

Cheers!
 
A push fid will never make it through 24 strand Double Braid, or 16 strand. Push Fids are most helpful for hollow braids, or simply as a measurement tool only for 16 and 24 strand ropes.

The first Wire Fid I ever made was using a coat hanger. It was a poor choice since the coating caught fibers terribly. A piano string of similar diameter will be much more friendly. There are many sources for wire of the appropriate gauge.

For most 24s Double Braids, all you need to do is:

- Take about 40" section of wire and fold it in half, to make it 20" overall. Do not crimp the fold super tight, rather, make the bend around something like a nail (1.5 mm or so).
- Next is to form the free ends of the wire around a ring or thimble to create an attachment point to pull the fid from. Whether using a ring or thimble, the means of connection is not unlike that of a soft cable wrap in a tree...pass the wire around the ring and begin forming turns around the standing part.
- Cover all the turns up with tape to prevent any snags from happening and you should be left with about an 18" Wire Pull Fid.

Cheers!
Eric is helpful and I'm just disrespectful

Reed Wortley
CTSP #01739
ISA CA #SO-6953A
 
What ever works. When you have only one to do at a time any method makes sense. I'm usually doing a bunch at once as quick as possible and the wire is a production tool. (Not bragging just sharing) I did three AP 30" i2i's with stitching in under an hour yesterday...

Reed Wortley
CTSP #01739
ISA CA #SO-6953A
 

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