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Morning all. Day off, gratefully received. Stayed the night in reekie on Friday night to help with a homer yesterday. Was an easy half day pruning fruit trees and a couple of small fells in good company. Nice to wake up at home with a quiet day to come though. Have a good one folks.
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Wordle 1,695 5/6 β¬β¬β¬π©β¬ β¬β¬β¬π©β¬ β¬β¬π©π©π© β¬β¬π©π©π© π©π©π©π©π©
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The ground is desperate, can hardly walk around here. What river are you on Stubby?
- Today
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Wordle 1,695 X/6 β¬β¬β¬β¬β¬ β¬β¬β¬π©π© β¬β¬β¬π©π© β¬β¬π¨π©π© β¬π¨β¬π©π© π©β¬π©π©π© numbnuts.
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Good morning troops . Misty mildish at 7c . Saturated ground still . The river is a few inches from spilling over . Happy Sunday . π
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robhunt joined the community
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Emily Haven joined the community
- Yesterday
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Marking ropes is not very precise to begin with but you learn the sizes for each rope and marking is seconds. I like to use thread instead of marker pen. A biner eye on 8-10mm prussik cord might be 62-65mm but 72-77mm on thicker climbing rope, if I remember. I've messed up a couple but so far eye sizes have been dead on. I had a lock stitching needle eye snap and get stuck in a splice, that caused some swearing. Cut it off and started again.
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True but maybe you need to be more precise when splicing a smaller eye so it may take more time, I don't know. There are plenty of splicers in this forum. Maybe they can explain if its more difficult to splice to a specific size. If they do mess it up then that's a lot of wasted time and rope.
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The process is exactly the same for any eye size, large just uses slightly more rope. I dont believe a couple of inches in the eye will make any difference for a rigging line.
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I think elm.
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Can we talk about underrated bands in this thread too? Idlewild are excellent (and I think pretty well known) but donβt show the signs of conventional success. Iβve got YouTube videos with more views than them. Mick Dempsey has more followers on instagram. Make it make sense. Iβd have given a kidney to be at the Iona show.
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If the spliced eye on a rigging line is large. I was told the larger the eye the more material is available in the even of shock loading. Similar to a rigging system, the more rope the system the more stretch is available when it gets shock loaded. Large splices in dead eye slings are for similar reason. The added advantage is when uou cow hitch or tie off, the throat of the splice is not directly in the knot.
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I understand the captive bit but some of them really tight! We've had the odd customer complain about it.
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Try ecocomach ( not sure about spelling) or case they did a 2.7 triple
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I would suggest that this is an issue/ It looks like the glue that seals the welch plug is failing. You could try using some super glue to reseal it but you need to dry and degrease it and use the glue very sparingly so it doesn't seep down inside the plug. Something like thick gorilla glue is good. I've tried this bodge on a few plugs and it seems to have worked.
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Climb line splices are generally tighter to keep the splice somewhat captive on a carabiner. There is no benefit for a large eye. Most decent manufacturers use a "thin splice" to aid in installation of non mid line attachable devices (ZIG-ZAG) and for the effective retrieval through modern cambium adverts where the traditional double braid splice would interfere. As far as the regs go, they need to meet the relevant EN criteria
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The deal was that they got proper stuff in but alas, it is tip site! One that had various chip truck, 4x4 and trailers dump and go.
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Interesting question, Ill ask a couple of rope manufactures. I always presumed that it was more difficult to make a small eye splice therefore more expensive. I don't know if there are any regs on the size of a spliced eye on PPE climbing lines as they all seem to be very tight.
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Risk of heave cherry tree removal?
Peter 1955 replied to tree removing sad man's question in Homeowners Tree Advice Forum
I always hate Willow. Previous tenants next door planted one nearly ten yards from the foul water sanitary pipes serving our bungalows, only a few years ago. I was surprised to find that it had got in there, and was causing a blockage. Our landlady was not amused. The tree's not there any more. Our flowering cherry, which was here when we arrived, has never been an issue in over forty years. -
I own double braid spliced deadeyes because they came to me with other gear. Iβd never buy one. Put the thing in a bight of a plain length and knot with both legs. Twice as strong, wear point moves around, saves splice cost. Or like you say, at least use something where you can see the splice is still good.
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I'd imagine it's a bit of both for dead eyes. From my personal experience I don't like double braid splices for dead eyes. Ive blown a splice out on an 18mm dead eye with a piece that cant have weighed more than 500kg. A locked brummel in hollow braid rope seems more appropriate for shock loading in my opinion.
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Thank christ thatβs over for another year. Iβve got two pheasants in the freezer. Iβm giving them to my parentsβ dog.
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Concur. Possibly why I semi forgot that answer. I also might have thought it wasnβt very good. I assume strop ones are long so you can girth hitch a portawrap on. Neat but loses strength (important or not but it still does). There might be some martitime use requirement that we donβt know about?