Fell down a rabbithole of knot nerdery this evening.
I'm sure many of us use prussiks for securing tarps to ridgelines and various other uses.
And I'm sure many of us use tautline hitches for making adjustable guy lines. Tautline hitch is a rolling hitch tied to its own standing end, and is very similar to the Magnus hitch. It occured to me this evening that the magnus hitch is just one turn short of a prussik. So has anyone used a prussik tied to its own standing end to make an adjustable guy line? Why do we rarely do this? And conversely, why do we rarely secure a tarp to a ridgeline using a Magnus hitch (or rolling hitch for that matter)? I'm guessing it's just habit or convention?
I'm sure many of us use prussiks for securing tarps to ridgelines and various other uses.
And I'm sure many of us use tautline hitches for making adjustable guy lines. Tautline hitch is a rolling hitch tied to its own standing end, and is very similar to the Magnus hitch. It occured to me this evening that the magnus hitch is just one turn short of a prussik. So has anyone used a prussik tied to its own standing end to make an adjustable guy line? Why do we rarely do this? And conversely, why do we rarely secure a tarp to a ridgeline using a Magnus hitch (or rolling hitch for that matter)? I'm guessing it's just habit or convention?