Overhand knot with draw-loop
Appearance
Overhand knot with draw-loop | |
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Category | Hitch |
ABoK | 52 |
A slipped half hitch[1] [2] or Noose[3] is a knot in which the weight of the load the rope carries depresses the loop sufficiently to keep it in place until the load item is placed in its location. When no longer required the free end may be pulled and draw the loop through and so release the load.
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Tying onto a ring.
The Overhand Noose[4] is sometimes used as a Slip Knot to form the loops of a Trucker's Hitch, or as a Stopper. Double Noose is used in arboriculture to fix a rope to a carabiner. Today this knot is mistakenly named like Barrel Hitch.
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Make an eye, the working end is shown on the right.
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Bring the eye left and down, in front of the standing part.
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Pull the standing part through the eye, forming a bight. The working end is shown below the standing end.
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Tighten
See also
References
- ^ Day, Cyrus (1986). The Art of Knotting and Splicing, 4th Edition. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. pp. 36 (Knot #15). ISBN 0-87021-062-9.
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(help) [first edition 1947] - ^ Ashley, Clifford W.. The Ashley Book of Knots. Published by Faber and Faber, 1993 — #52 — p14 — ISBN 9780571096596
- ^ Ashley, Clifford W. (1944). The Ashley Book of Knots, p.204. Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-04025-3 «The Noose is closely related to the Overhand Knot, the final tuck of the Noose being made with a bight instead of a single end, as in the Overhand. It is often employed ashore, but seldom at sea, its simplicity being its greatest recommendations. It may be tied in the bight as well as in the end of a rope. Formerly it was much used in snaring birds and small animals and was commonly tied in horsehair or small wire»
- ^ Day. The Art of Knotting and Splicing, 4th Edition. pp. 84 (Knot #88).