Documenting my hand-sewn eye process

Btw, here's a better picture that shows the compression maintained. The picture above was with me hanging in it.
 

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Those stitches look like the first of three passes that a CNC bar tacking machine would make. No doubt they hold your weight in a garage. Professional recommendation? Don't use stuff like that in life or death scenarios.

yeah, like i said, it was my first attempt on a short 3' piece of rope. next time around i need to make the final pass wider into more "Meat" of the rope. i could put a fourth pass on this one and it would be super bomber. i plan on sending some stuff to break soon. Hell, i could do a foruth pass and use this for a split tail probably.. or just make a bomb proof dog leash
 
Watching that just about completely demoralized my efforts to learn this craft. Also makes me wonder why a spliced eye costs 15 bucks. I know the machine is expensive, but dang......like next to no labor cost in that process unless there is more to the setup than I imagine.
 
Left over from a hitch cord. Would work wonderfully for tending a HH. 4 passes. The fourth pass was a much wider angle but when I was done you couldn't get a needle in the cord.
 

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...and I'm all for hand sewn splices and appreciate the research and skill moss started here and that others have contributed to.
The process can work and some of the disadvantages of hand sewing can become advantages.
That being said, and those that are doing it successfully understand the risk, make sure you get them tested. Whatever process you chose, make sure you document it and repeat it exactly for each spice.
If you can't get them tested, test them yourself to failure and make sure that failure is NOT your splice. If the line breaks other than where your spice is you are good to go, if not, you need to have it tested and get a number where the splice failed.
Hanging on the spice in your garage is MEANINGLESS, TOTALLY MEANINGLESS.
 
Watching that just about completely demoralized my efforts to learn this craft. Also makes me wonder why a spliced eye costs 15 bucks. I know the machine is expensive, but dang......like next to no labor cost in that process unless there is more to the setup than I imagine.

JTree, it's not the labor cost your buying it's the liability insurance cost your paying for.
 
And the setup, and the research and development, and the scrap/waste, and the employee training, and their perks/holiday pay/benefits. Maintenance, programming and more.
 

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