Break Test of Modified Trilene "Knot" in Amsteel
Harlan W S, July 19, 2022
Pure Dyneema (UHMWPE) tends to make weak knots. Joel Hartter (MS
thesis) found ~1/3 the rated breaking strength for bowline, figure 8,
and double fisherman; that test used slow pulls and 9/16" Amsteel. My
own tests with 1/8" amsteel showed just 25% for a water "knot." Amsteel
is generally spliced, rather than knotted, a practice that limits
flexibility of configuration.
This quick test measured the breaking strength of a modified Trilene
knot (really a hitch) in 1/8" (2500 lb bs) Amsteel on a carabiner. This setup could be used to put
a connection point in the middle of a long Amsteel line. In ~1 second
pull, the hitch broke at ~59% of the rated cord strength.
A disdvantage of this connection: the Trilene hitch is very hard to
untie, once weighted. (With nylon line, the Trilene hitch is up to 100%
strength.)
Note that commercial "Dyneema" slings typically contain 35-50% nylon by
bulk, and are much easier to knot (nylon has 3x to 4x the coefficient
of friction of Dyneema). Furthermore, since the weaker nylon reduces
the rated breaking strength of the unknotted sling, the ratio (knotted
breaking strength)/(rated breaking strength) is inherently higher.
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