Using common, inexpensive, widely available, 3/8", hollow-braid polypropylene--which is notorious for its ability to slip and its problematic retention--I tested five loops that have recently been posted about. Here are the results, in the order of best performance to worst performance. (The higher the number, the worse the loop's performance.) The main purpose of the test was to determine each loop's performance RELATIVELY, and primarily with respect to LOAD SHIFTING:
(1) Scared-Man's Bowline (Left-Handed) (The Big Winner)
(2) Double Bowline (Left-Handed)
(3) Bowline (Left-Handed)
(4) Front-Back Bowline (Left-Handed)
(5) Inlin (The Big Loser)
To be polite, the Inlin slipped; to be more accurate, it ran like a Granny; to be fair, I was able to make it hold rather well--at first; but, the polypropylene's retention waited for the right moment to strike, and strike it did. When the Inlin became slightly loose before the polypropylene's retention was able to set itself adequately to the knot, pulling on the standing part and one of the loop legs made it run like a Granny. Since the Inlin cannot be made stopper-flush (i.e., tailless, and so that a stopper can assist with security), and since its loop is unable to be precisely sized and resized, the Inlin is . . . a bad loop.
The Front-Back Bowline performed remarkably better in every respect. I was able to make its working-end loop leg slip more easily than that of the Bowline's, but that was ONLY when 100% of the pull was on that leg, and 0% on the other, and then it happened only sometimes. Load shifting will not likely cause a 100% and 0% situation. A snag could, I suppose--but not a snag with a load. Think about it.
The Bowline performed a little better than did the Front-Back Bowline.
The Double Bowline did not slip at all, though it . . . flexed a little. (When the polypropylene's retention caused it to loosen, it was in danger of slipping, but it would catch itself quickly and rather well. I got it to slip slightly only with repeated tugs in the context of the retention problem.)
The Scared-Man's Bowline did not slip; it barely even "flexed." Retention problems were non-existent. It made some creaking noises and looked quite good in the polypropylene. Further, the Two Half Hitches beneficially influence the shape and position of the standing neck, and the position of the Bowline's coil. THIS is the Bowline to beat. Is it a Bowline? Is it Two Half Hitches with a funny coil around its working end and loop leg? Who cares? It's the winner.
By the way, I wanted to address something: The Front-Back Bowline really doesn't "waste" anything, it merely utilizes the applied load in a way that is different from the way that the applied load is utilized in other Bowlines. Think about it: The more the load is applied, the more the eye grips the loop leg. The more the eye grips the loop leg, the more its position on the loop leg is guaranteed. The more its position is guaranteed, the more the neighboring U-shape is guaranteed to stay pinched--SINCE IT WAS DRESSED AND SET PROPERLY IN THE FIRST PLACE BEFORE LOADING. If the knot was dressed and set properly, then the pinch of the U-shape will be adequate to take the knot's security over the rope's safe working load (except in those rare cases when there is a 100% pull on the working-end loop leg).
JCS