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What’s this interesting material coming out of my stove?
Stubby replied to Mr. Ed's topic in Firewood forum
Part of a broken baffle ? -
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In my experience (I don't regularly splice any more) a large eye is a bit more forgiving with the final bury. On a tight eye splice sometimes the cover can bunch up a bit of you haven't fully equalised the core/cover. A bit of excess cover in a large eye is less of an issue.
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Should have an MBS (from new) of around 45kn. Any other markings on it, Mick?
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Sorry, missed the unidirectional part. No, I use standard pulleys, sometimes with multiple sheaves depending on the situation. I can’t honestly remember working with anyone using Unidirectional ones.
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Peter Boys1 joined the community
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If this is a real thing it will have been tested, the manufacturers will have data to back it up. It is odd that there is no mention of it in splicing documentation that I can find. I would like to know, so I'll get some emails sent. I imagine the difference will be small and only notable with extreme shock loading. A downside of a large splice, users will try to girth hitch with the eye, thats not going to pull equally on both sides of the splice.
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Out of context, we were not talking about the vast number of splicing techniques or thin zigzag insertable eyes. Changing the eye length does not change the process, only the length of rope marked. You dont use a different process for a tight biner eye or a 10" eye.
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Nia joined the community
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I’ve been finding these sheets of a ceramic like material at the bottom of our log burner. My missus puts chicken carcasses in when I’m not watching but nothing else odd.
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Is that SWL, WLL or MBS?
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You mean the ex offender?
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Not true, different manufacturers use completely different techniques, varying from the traditional double braid splice, Tachyon's "splife" and previously used "slaice". Cousin have their own patented double braid splice as do Courant. Let's not get into the shitshow that is Marlow. It's not a "one size fits all" technique.
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I asked Nod a lot of years ago and that was the answer I got. If the spice gets shock loaded there may be a small chance it disrupts the bury and throat of the splice. At least with a bit more material in the eye, there will be a small amount of stretch before the bury takes the hit. Don’t get me wrong, I used to prefer a tight splice to hold the krab in place but after a discussion with people far more knowledgable than I that is how it was explained.
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Sorry. Missed that. So more rope to absorb shock. Is it just the amount in the eye itself or does longer/shorter in the eye transmit force through the bury somehow differently? And how sure are you it makes a big difference? There’s being broadly aware of the notion and then there’s, “Every splicing manual and other source of industry knowledge I’ve ever encountered has gone out of its way to say it.”
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Kat135 joined the community
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Wordle 1,695 5/6 ⬜⬜⬜⬜🟨 🟨🟨⬜⬜⬜ ⬜⬜🟩🟩🟩 🟩⬜🟩🟩🟩 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
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Morning all, Dry and semi sunny at present. Lazing about at our friends, completed all tasks yesterday. Home this afternoon. Have a good Sunday
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Adam1234 joined the community
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See previous answer.
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What’s the answer then, Rich? Why do rigging lines have bigger eyes?
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Par four here. Wordle 1,695 4/6* ⬜⬜⬜⬜🟩 ⬜⬜⬜🟩🟩 🟩⬜⬜🟩🟩 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
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Was a very were few days and I've not seen this bit of Shepshed flooded so bad! Wonder if my garage flooded again - will find out later! At Retford so standard chores and a few we meant to do but was wet each weekend! Enjoy your day! Fillip, Bean, know.
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I use multiple pulleys in winching scenarios more than I do in rigging.
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Trip out into Oslo today. Needed to get some new snowboard boots so decided to get the ferry into the city and take the dog for a bit of a training trip. She was pretty good and chilled for the most part.
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Doesn’t really matter the size mate. It is just a different measurement for the eye size when you are marking g and preparing the rope. The technique is pretty much identical.