... if I could find any dyneema locally.\
IMO, a waste of time, as you have noted that you've
nothing to generate much force with. I've put my
5:1 pulley (noting : lousy pulley w/much friction)
to pulling 5/16" ? Spectra w/o seeing anything of
the known slippage at higher forces. (I'm coming
to believe that what might transpire is a melting
and slippage of semi-liquid fibres! --150deg.F is
NOT hard to reach!)
What I do have that seems to defy friction is a
monofilament PP marine cord which I've found with parallel
PP monofil. fibres core or a very slightly twisted 3-strand
core of like material (which latter stuff is well fuller/firmer
than the former); and ORANGE is what I've seen around
the commercial-fishing places of South Jersey (USA).
Now, I don't know that this stuff misbehaves when push
comes to shove, only that manual setting seems to not
impress it much.

As for force, you should be able to rig up some sort of a
pulley --a real one will go far in giving good force (vs.
say using carabiners, for which the coefficient of friction
is around 60-66% (!). (And if so, you'll want to have a
reasonable idea of what knots will jam and test those
only carefully, lest you make a permanent knot.)
((I once had to use my 5:1 pulley, just getting a hook's
bill tip into some jammed knot (large-ish rope) so to
then be able to pull it open.))
--dl*
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