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View Poll Results: How many different knots do you know how to tie?
1 or fewer 1 5.26%
2 2 10.53%
3 3 15.79%
4 2 10.53%
5 1 5.26%
6 2 10.53%
7 0 0%
8 2 10.53%
9 0 0%
10 or more 6 31.58%
Voters: 19. You may not vote on this poll

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  #11 (permalink)  
Old 09-25-2006, 11:27 AM
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Re: Knot Tying

Quote:
Originally Posted by Turtle
Quick T, say bow!
Okay, 5!
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Old 09-25-2006, 03:24 PM
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Re: Knot Tying

Square
Bowline
Various sheepshanks
Figure eight
trucker's hitch
Clove Hitch
Surgeon's knot
Cinch knot
Diamond knot
Matthew walker knot
Sheet bend
Bowstring knot
hangman knot
Half hitch
john wayne "bank robber" knot
rein knot

I learned most of my knots out on the farms in AL.
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Old 09-25-2006, 04:56 PM
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Re: Knot Tying

Quote:
Originally Posted by Turtle
I listed sheep shank but on reviewing the cards I see that's wrong and it's the sheet bend I know.
Sheepshanks are used to shorten a rope temporarily and a sheet bend is used to join 2 ropes, particularly lines of different sizes.
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Old 09-25-2006, 05:30 PM
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Talking Re: Knot Tying

Quote:
Originally Posted by C1ay
Sheepshanks are used to shorten a rope temporarily and a sheet bend is used to join 2 ropes, particularly lines of different sizes.
Roger It seems many of these knots have different names and many of the names have different knots.
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Old 09-25-2006, 06:15 PM
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Re: Knot Tying

I don't know too many. I used to know more when I was in Scouts, but it's been eight years or so since I used them, so I don't remember a bunch of them.
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Old 09-25-2006, 06:42 PM
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Re: Knot Tying

My dad is the knot guy in my family. I never learned them, and it is a skill I wish I had.

C1ay, you mentioned the mathmatics of knots. I remember an article on knots in PopularMechanics that I began reading in the early 90's some time, that I never managed to find again and complete. It was a fascinating write up on the mathmatics of knots, complete with illistrations. It talked about how a knot is determined primarily by the number of times that the rope crosses itself. But the interesting part of the article (the part I never got to because I never found the magazine again!) was supposed to be how the patterns in knots (number of crosses) had been found to parallel various other phenomena. And the author hinted at a parallel with human brain function. But I never read the rest of the article! Might you be familiar with any of that?

Bill
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Old 09-26-2006, 04:22 AM
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Re: Knot Tying

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mathworld
In mathematics, a knot is defined as a closed, non-self-intersecting curve that is embedded in three dimensions and cannot be untangled to produce a simple loop (i.e., the unknot). While in common usage, knots can be tied in string and rope such that one or more strands are left open on either side of the knot, the mathematical theory of knots terms an object of this type a "braid" rather than a knot. To a mathematician, an object is a knot only if its free ends are attached in some way so that the resulting structure consists of a single looped strand.

A knot can be generalized to a link, which is simply a knotted collection of one or more closed strands.

The study of knots and their properties is known as knot theory. Knot theory was given its first impetus when Lord Kelvin Eric Weisstein's World of Biography proposed a theory that atoms were vortex loops, with different chemical elements consisting of different knotted configurations (Thompson 1867). P. G. Tait Eric Weisstein's World of Biography then cataloged possible knots by trial and error. Much progress has been made in the intervening years.

More at Knot....
I seem to remember reading somewhere about topologically optimized representation of information in the brain and the application of knot theory, perhaps in the article you suggested.
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Old 09-26-2006, 12:02 PM
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Re: Knot Tying

i just know a lot, i'm an ex-scout (just finished) in the UK
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Old 02-17-2007, 10:43 AM
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Re: Knot Tying

I know between 15 and 25 more than likely, Boy Scouts
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