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That sounds like a fat chunk of wood. Story time?i‘ve snapped slings twice, both were 3/4“ tenex and undersized for the load.
I’m not going to deny the block wasn’t choked up to the face. Looks like it is a pocket sling, and a branch collar was in the way.
I’m curious where the rope actually broke as it flung a short chunk away.
Slings held nicely, looked like a heavy piece (rarely work in oaks and constantly impressed by their weight). Wasn’t that a 1/2” line?
It’s not worth my time to argue but that wasn’t a new shiney line that broke and it was called…
A Humboldt wouldn’t have done that![]()
Criticsm of a cut or a technique as presented in this or any other video is not throwing mud... Crticism is a conversation.. throwing mud is attack on the person, not the technique. Pretty common around here. throwing insults when your argument can't stand on the facts, so personal attacks are all that you have left...wow way to fling mud and jump to conclusions.
He said he knew it was gong to break.. then he broke it.. Log lands perfectly flat on lawn at base of tree.... doing no appreciable damage, given that stump will be removed and lawn likely installed. That's as clear as it gets.. he did it on purpose or at least as test to see if and when an old rope would break. The fact that he then he posted it on instagram indicates it was done on purpose... Only he can say for sure.... what's up Mark? @Mark ChisholmI’m not saying the setup wasn’t perfect.
I trust mark to assess the rope, and take the time to train the crew. Rope was the weak link and it broke.
The fact it broke in two spots is wild, I’d guess it was from the double whip getting pinched or somehow crossed up.
Neither of us were there
mkaes sense, but not to be dismissed and miss a learning opportunity.. Do you think the ring contributed to the failure?.. 4 feet from the end? was that the knot or would that be at the ring? Could the bend radius of the line on the ring do more harm that the DWT did good? These are the things I like to think about... I almost never DWT... But if I do in the future, it won't be with a ring...There's not much to this story. I was working with one of my brother's crews on a tree removal to help him out and met them on site. When it came time to chunk wood down, I decided to rig a couple of pieces to preserve the lawn because the stump was to remain 4' high. I asked for a larger rigging line since I was using 1/2" in the canopy. They brought me some old, crispy 5/8" line and I laughed. They Saif that the new ropes were not put back in this truck since this truck usually goes with a different chip truck. I decided to double-whip it for extra strength, but was not convinced it would hold. I wasn't worried because it was just grass. Told them to stay clear that this could very easily break since they couldn't lower much. It did break, but only in one place about 4' from the end. The rigging block was no where near 2' below the cut. Not a big deal or much to examine. End of story.
The technical advisor at Marlow also claims that the brummel lock doesn't cost you any strength if the tail is fully buried, even in high modulus fiber.10 degrees tilt before, 30 degrees tilt loaded (by eye) (?)
this is the one alluded to earlier where a collar contributed to one leg's tilt - 3 different girths to see!
Everything I've managed to find shows distinct before sling leg tilt angles and after/loaded sling leg tilt angles. The after tilt angle is 20 to 30 degrees if the before angle was around 5 to 10 degrees. The after/loaded angles correspond to 40 to 50% increase of tension in the sling leg. Dan's math was right just the magnitude wrong.
This does raise the topic of sling strength which is it's own topic. I spotted a very tight tie on an X ring where the legs were directly on the splice. On a typical loose-eye dead eye the legs grab the two halves of the eye distributing the contact/bend load. Cow hitch has two legs per side seeing load vs timber hitch two/one. Whoopsie loopy depends. Brummell-holed type slings it's twin strands or splice depending on style against join spot of brummel splice. You could see where same size cordage a loose eye dead eye in a cow hitch would easily offset the 40 to 50% and the full strength of the eye would be the limit. Bonner claimed 100% strength for brummels. And don't forget "one size up" as a start point.
If this is true then it must apply to the hitch, where the rigging line is tied to the piece. Loading is same as the sling.Everything I've managed to find shows distinct before sling leg tilt angles and after/loaded sling leg tilt angles. The after tilt angle is 20 to 30 degrees if the before angle was around 5 to 10 degrees. The after/loaded angles correspond to 40 to 50% increase of tension in the sling leg. Dan's math was right just the magnitude wrong.
I apologize that my diagram of the highline forces sent this discussion in the wrong direction, I'll take the risk to add another diagram. Corrections will be much appreciated.So if I tie onto a 100lb piece, then the rigging line sees 150lb at the hitch?
