LandCruiserPhil
Expedition Leader
Having been around when both steel and synthetic line broke makes you appreciate synthetic much more. Also, break a synthetic line you can just tie it back together, Steel line not so easy.
B30.9 has nylon web slings, roundslings, woven eye rope slings, wire rope slings, steel chain slings. I don't see anything about a knotted shackle. The industry that I thought might cover them is arborists, that's what I assumed would be the first specifying authority someone might mention.ASME B30.9-2018: Slings
It covers some non-metallic devices used for overhead lifting.
You can tie wirerope back together.
Of course everybody knows either rope "just tied together" is severely weakened.
As an aside,
Its amusing how rope'tards go on about synthetic rope breaking. It "simply falls in place, not dangerous at all".
Obviously they parroting something heard in the airport mensroom. They never been near a line breaking under stress.
Attached Dyneema chemical resistance paper.anyone know what effect oil/gas/ grease/ solvent has on the integrity of a synthetic line? i know we have to discard our work safety ropes if they even get stored in the same work truck closet as petroleum.
Have you ever run synthetic line and soft shackles or are you just repeating internet rumor?
I've had the same synthetic line on the old winch on the flat fender for over 7+ years now. I haven't done anything special to it. It still works as well as day 1.
That line has been all over the country including mud, sand, snow, rocks, etc.
I've used line that was over 15 years old.
Most of the rumors about synthetic based recovery products are greatly exadurated in my experience.
anyone know what effect oil/gas/ grease/ solvent has on the integrity of a synthetic line? i know we have to discard our work safety ropes if they even get stored in the same work truck closet as petroleum.
Personal eyes on experience.
I have seen many synthetic lines rupture over the years, and not a single wire line. I know the wire can also snap, simply have never seen one with my own eye, and even video from youtube are not many. You see hicht month, ancor points, but not many wires or even synthetic.
And btw, my Warn HS9500i has the same wire from when it was new in 2000 and was use in all kinds of recovery, including very deep mud, like fender hight moss. The synthetic line I saw break where maybe 2 years old. And one broke at the drum all the way inside probably 4 layers. So forget about slpicing that thing.
I know they are nice and light, but in my book, not as reliable for general use. And I could use lighter weight, since I have a front and rear winch. But can just not comit my self with what I have seen from my one eyes so far. Not for the price they go for.
B30.9 has nylon web slings, roundslings, woven eye rope slings, wire rope slings, steel chain slings. I don't see anything about a knotted shackle. The industry that I thought might cover them is arborists, that's what I assumed would be the first specifying authority someone might mention.
My curiosity is how something relying on workmanship and technique can be standardized to be repeatable, inspectable and testable (thus certified and tagged as such). B30 generally outlines design margins and proof testing criteria, for example. Does this apply to soft shackles?
Having been around when both steel and synthetic line broke makes you appreciate synthetic much more. Also, break a synthetic line you can just tie it back together, Steel line not so easy.
And one broke at the drum all the way inside probably 4 layers. So forget about slpicing that thing.
Most don't consider that. At work every rope used that for life safety has its own log. EVERYTIME it is used it is inspected and logged.
Technically, you can SPLICE both back together. You don't want to tie either one.
The benefit goes to synthetic line in my opinion because you can splice it with a sharp pocket knife and an improvised fid made from a ball point pen.
So splice steel cable you generally need a tool to cut the strands of the hardened steel, usually something abrasive. A steel splice also has exposed strands that don't like getting wound up back on the drum.