How would I tie a double figure of eight knot for attaching to a rock climbing harness?
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2also referred to as a figure eight follow through.– AM_HawkDec 17, 2013 at 20:23
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1Thx @Liam. Really appreciate your work. Would like to see those explanations for other types of knots just to have a reference to look at :)– WillsDec 18, 2013 at 21:01
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1@bashophil Have a look at animatedknots.com/…– AM_HawkJan 12, 2014 at 21:46
1 Answer
First things first:
Please be careful when rock climbing. Learning information on the internet is no substitute to proper training from an experienced and knowledgeable guide.
Please don't use this information to put yourself in a situation where you may be in danger.
That said
You will need around one arms span of rope (about 1m).
First off make a loop in your hand thus, do not let go of the rope until specified:
Take the loose and and pass it over your wrist pulling it round to the front:
Pass the loose end back through the loop your holding in your hand:
Pull the loose end tight downwards. If it doesn't look like a figure 8, below, you've done it wrong. Untie everything and start again:
Now pass the loose end though whatever you want to attach the rope to (I'm using a carbiner here):
You now need to rethread the loose end back though the original figure eight, this produces the double in the double figure eight. Essentially you simply follow the line of the original loops.
First off pass the loose end back up though loop nearest whatever your attached to:
Follow the rope around the first loop:
Then around the top of the rope and back down, going though the loop nearest the attachment point:
now loop back around the base of the knot and back up though the top loop:
Pull tight:
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2Your step titled "First off pass the loose end back up through loop nearest whatever your attached to:" you should follow on the right side, see step 6 of this link, currently your final knot under load will have an overlap(top left of final knot). Does anyone see what I see?– AM_HawkDec 17, 2013 at 20:30
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1I agree with @AM_Hawk and also in the last photo the upper two loops are not lying well. You need to pass the running end between the existing strand and the loop either at the beginning or at the end (the lower or upper loop) if you want a perfectly dressed knot. Dec 18, 2013 at 12:06
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2your both welcome to add another answer to this question if you feel it needs one?– user2766Dec 18, 2013 at 13:06
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3You can do this knot in half as many steps by doubling back the rope in the first step.– AndrewDec 20, 2013 at 17:49
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4@Andrew That's a figure-8 on a bight. It cannot be used to tie the rope to a closed loop (on a harness) which is why the follow through or retrace is used. Dec 21, 2013 at 15:46