Sadly, which leaves me heartbroken
(I knew that I could not have invented a new knot)
that EKRW308, which I think you all are calling the "Quick 8" is a LEFT HAND
version of my TALK and is tied exactly like I tie a left handed TALK.
Thanks for all your time and effort on my behalf.
-John
I will again say that the
EKFR presentation is vague, and
so not clearly a prior discovery, although the knotting
is the same --it's a question of loading, and of function.
But I now see that the OP's goal was previously realized
in a presentation in
Knotting Matters (KM) #10, p.13 of
a letter dated 1984-10-23, in which the similar structure
but
with a round turn in the *front of the fig.8*is shown and advocated qua "adjustable dog's lead" (I'm
not sure what one is supposed to do with much tail
"adjusted" out in shrinking an eye!?). As with the
round turn in a
double bowline, the turn put into
the
fig.8 (which makes it a "fig.10" --oriented in
the "reverse" way) can be dressed in various ways.
OR WAIT ... , even here it might be otherwise, as I'm
now realizing that there's ambiguity in the illustration
and text as to how this is to be loaded! I
think that
it might be taken like the
crabber's eye, in which the
final setting of the knot --at that point, really a noose-hitch
(hitching tail to S.Part)-- puts a hard bend into the S.Part
and fairly well locks the knot into position, creating
a "fixed" eye (loop). This working makes sense of the
text about adjustability, and is more apt for "hitch".
SOoooo, so close yet so far.
.:. IMO, only I have clearly discovered the OP's knot
(prior or knot, we may leave unknown; but independently),
which shows a nice, gripping aspect of the
fig.8.
And OneLoneKnot has put the knot to good use and
advocated for it, and I have had one variant tested
to rupture, in strong rope.
--dl*
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