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What is this knot called?
"Mark W. Oots" mark_ctc@(no spam)ameritech.net wrote in message ... "Lionel F. Stevenson" wrote in message ... I haven't seen this knot anywhere. It was shown to me by a Salmon fisherman. It is tied so the knot is on the underside of a down turned eye, and on the top of an upturned eye. http://www.cameraart.ca/knot.html -- Lionel I call it "way more complicated than it needs to be". Mark Okay, maye I've been away for a while...who are you oots? john |
What is this knot called?
I think you are referring to the turle knot... http://www.flyfishingconnection.com/doubleturtle.html JT .. . . and isn't the purpose of that knot to enable the user to determine whether the hook rides up or down? ? ? john |
What is this knot called?
On Wed, 09 Nov 2005 13:55:30 -0700, rw
wrote: Wolfgang wrote: "Lionel F. Stevenson" wrote in message ... I haven't seen this knot anywhere. It was shown to me by a Salmon fisherman. It is tied so the knot is on the underside of a down turned eye, and on the top of an upturned eye. http://www.cameraart.ca/knot.html -- Lionel No idea what this is. However, it looks mighty peculiar. According to the illustration, the line passes through the eye of the hook from left to right and then makes a sweeping bend back to the left. The rest of the gyrations cause the working end to cross the original running line a total of five times, but ALL of these crosses occur above the running line.....NONE of them below. The net result of this is that the original bend is not involved in the knot in any way. The knot.....whatever it may be called and whatever use it may allegedly serve.....appears to be nothing more than a large and needlessly complicated stopper. Like Jeff Taylor posted, it's a double turle, but it's very poorly illustrated. Jeff posted a better link, and here's another. http://www.pechetruite.com/Noeuds/hook6.htm It's not a "stopper." The knot forms a loop (two loops, actually) that secures to the shank of the hook just behind the eye. I suspect that Lionel was attempting to illustrate a Double Turle. What he did illustrate is not a Double Turle. |
What is this knot called?
On Thu, 10 Nov 2005 04:21:26 GMT, "asadi"
wrote: I think you are referring to the turle knot... http://www.flyfishingconnection.com/doubleturtle.html JT . . . and isn't the purpose of that knot to enable the user to determine whether the hook rides up or down? ? ? john To put an in-line force from the line to the shank of up- or down-turned eye hooks, thus making hookup more certain. R |
What is this knot called?
LOL. I just tied it as illustrated in a piece of rope: what a
cluster****!! The last small loop tightens on the larger loops so quickly that the first larger loop cannot slide through, and the whole thing binds up before it can tighten. And wolfie's right: the original bend has nothing to do with anything. This definately falls into the category of "If you can't tie a good knot, tie a lot of knots". I bet he is referring to a Turle know, as was stated before. --riverman |
What is this knot called?
asadi wrote:
"Conan The Librarian" wrote in message ... Looks like a Gordian knot to me. Is this the knot that Alexander cut with his sword??? Yep, that's it. I was starting to wonder if my attempt at humor had gone right over everyone's head. Chuck Vance (but I should have known that nothing could go over your head, John ;-) |
What is this knot called?
"Lionel F. Stevenson" wrote snip... Perhaps this is too trivial for you. -- Lionel Nothing is too trivial for ROFF.... Dan |
What is this knot called?
Lionel F. Stevenson wrote:
snip It is not a double turle. It is, however, a great knot, and I use it to tie fly to tippet almost always. Perhaps my illustration is at fault. Perhaps I'll do another illustration to share this great knot with you. Perhaps I'll not. Perhaps this is too trivial for you. ??? We *live* for this! -- TL, Tim --------------------------- http://css.sbcma.com/timj/ |
What is this knot called?
Are you SURE the diagram is completely correct? As Wolfie politely put
it (trust me), that initial bend is meaningless, as the entire pile of loops lies on top of it so it is not bound up in the knot. Also, the last loop (the little one on top) is not an overhand, its just two twists through the big loops. The way you drew it, it looks like you mean for it to be an overhand. Double-check your diagram. I can't see how this is any more than a fancy double-overhand stopper, the way its shown. With lots of extra twists that fall out immediately. --riverman |
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