Hi tsik_lestat, Thanks for bringing us your knot.

It certainly is a strange creation, and I have to admit that my first intuitive impression was not a positive one. Looking closer at its functional structure, your knot turns into a real challenge.
The first component you show, the one you call the 'crossing hitch' is immediately recognisable as a Carrick Component looking exactly as it would appear on the loop leg of the Carrick loopknot. In the Carrick loopknot, a second Carrick Component is made around the fully loaded SP and this forms the primary secure nipping function for the whole knot. The two components close around each other, the function of the loopleg component is only to stabilise the SP Carrick which in turn is providing all the gripping force necessary to ensure the return loop leg remains securely prevented from pulling through.
In your knot however, you have formed the Carrick on the outgoing loop leg, so it is never going to be able to develop the full nipping force available from the SP. which is wasted by being deployed on the carrick collar around the outgoing loop leg. This was a promising start, employing what is probably the most valuable component available to us, but immediately diminished by giving it to the outgoing loop leg.
Then finally we have the returning loop leg. It could have taken a full loop around the two carrick legs and born the benefit of the Carrick nip, but no, it captures only one of the Carrick legs, takes a turn around the SP (doing nothing) then passes out of the Carrick collar which is enjoying some of the compression from the load on the SP.
Just from its components and their engagement, it is a knot of lost possibilities. So how did it perform?
Well, with that Carrick component in there it should be jam resistant and indeed it was. In 550 loaded to 50%MBS it did not jam nor fail. BUT - when I subjected it to oscillating loading, the WE progressively pulled through the Carrick collar until failure. So. I would have to give this knot the Ashley Skull and crossbones rating.
Having been critical of your knot, I have to applaud your inventiveness. I hope you found the process of experimentation fun and that critical comments do not stop your experimentation and investigation of knotting components and their interaction.
Welcome to the club of Knot Bothers.
Derek