After a tiresome exchange of opinions and negations with Dan Lehman (1), (where we were trying hard to tell something to each other, but not trying equally hard to listen and understand each other...), I was convinced that he is right after all : There are two distinct variations of the Zeppelin bend indeed, even though not the ones he had in mind ! 
While happy to SEE (your cordage colors inevitably brighten my spirit)
you pursuing this topic,
I'll beg off your offer to a ride along the "not listening" road :
I listened well and responded,
and your post here at least puts some rub to your mocking "notice ... not three"
except of course in your continued denial of the obvious.
1) If one sets the
R.Z. bend ("Rosendahl's Zeppelin) from a loose state with
rapid tensioning of the SParts,
it is quite possible --perhaps likely(?)-- that each SPart will pull the opposite
end towards itself (i.e., in the direction that the SPart pulls),
as with the knot loose during this transition there will need to be much movement
of the SPart and so a duration of *draw* upon this end it initially u-tuirns around.
(I've avoided saying "other rope's end" for one could be tying the ends of
a single rope together; but it's easier to illustrate with the distinctness of
your cheery ropes : the Orange line will hug the White tail to itself, and
vice versa (no, not The Vice Versa --let's not Reever this thread into that one).)
It would be helpful to see this in orange & white, too. You can do it,
even if you must position the tails more deliberately (which is the one
sure way).
You can see one of my so-oriented knots here
(thread
"Ashley's Bend #1452 and Its Ilk" )
http://igkt.net/sm/index.php?topic=1446.msg10047#msg10047as well as a
SmitHunter's bend variation (different tails orientation).
2) With appropriate minimal wasting of parts of one's precious lifetime
by pulling on the tails a bit, the above orientation I submit can put into
the SParts a more gradual curvature than in most other dressings; it can
be such that the hugged-close tail doesn't get pressed fully out of the
axis of trension, so that the SPart curves slightly around it towards
making its complete u-turn around its own tail.
Which is in contrast to the commonly presented form where the SPart
runs straight to the u-turn without much *deflection*.
3) One can see from this orientation that continued wasting of life pulling
upon the tails will begin moving them out of this orientation as each end's
Overhand is being drawn tighter/smaller, during which another somewhat
transient orientation occurs in which the tails lie adjacent/parallel in a plane
parallel to the axis of tension,
forcing the SParts to deflect harder against each collar to angle up around
them. THIS form of SPart curvature resembles that shown by Inkanyezi
in his photos of the
Carrick Bend --more hard-edged triangular than the
softer tear-drop oval or even bight-like-U in other orientations.
4) The orientation of tails in
R.Z."X" is asymmetrical ; it works symmetrically
for that
False R.Z. bend because of that knot's different symmetry, with it
having same-handed Overhands.
And it is the sort of tails-exit variation that IMO improves the
SmitHunter's Bendby a similar curvature change and also getting the tails into a position that
better keeps the collars open, resisting jamming.
--dl*
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