Last edited by MDSH; 02-14-2013 at 10:35.
Mike
Learn to survive and thrive in any situation, for you never know what might happen. Love family and friends passionately. Suffer no fool. Know your purpose in life and follow it with all your heart.
I was surprised that it snapped. I've used a MSH before and because all the weight was on the knot, I thought this would be the same deal. However, now that I got some sense knocked into me, and with the helpful advice of the group here, I see the problem clearly. As noted earlier, I don't know my wood. This setup looks like the MSH in the end, but that's about all it has in common.
Looking forward to seeing some pictures of what others are using and how they've set it up.
It solved my single line problem beautifully: http://www.hammockforums.net/forum/s...ad.php?t=67994
Mike
Learn to survive and thrive in any situation, for you never know what might happen. Love family and friends passionately. Suffer no fool. Know your purpose in life and follow it with all your heart.
I wanted to address the issue of the small radius of the hammock loop over the single suspension line passing through the toggle by putting a collar of 3/8" o.d. PEX perpendicular to the toggle. This is set into a 3/8" hole drilled halfway through the 5/8" diameter toggle, so the toggle is probably significantly weakened. I shall employ a secondary suspension for the hammock to catch me if the toggle splits or breaks. Doing pull tests, I found that a single half-hitch on the toggle sometimes slipped, so I'll use a half-hitch on the other end of the toggle as well, though the ease of unfastening by pulling the loose end is sacrificed thereby. This 5/8" toggle is from the hardware store, and is neither oak nor hickory, so there's all the more reason for a safety net.
Using a single 4' Amsteel suspension line instead of a a 4' whoopie saves just about the same weight as this toggle, so there is no advantage there. The same setup with Dynaglide would be heavier than the corresponding whoopie. Longer suspension lines would allow greater weight savings using toggles, but perhaps not enough to justify them.
More later, post-hang.
In lieu of a PVC T fitting, one could use a T Bracket found at your local hardware store. The 3" size are $2.47 for 2. Bonus is they come pre drilled. Don't know the strength of these though.
I suppose a simple bowline knot around my carabiner at the hammock's head would prevent a hard fall if the toggle failed catastrophically.
I see nothing but positive things in this technique.
.
Mike
Learn to survive and thrive in any situation, for you never know what might happen. Love family and friends passionately. Suffer no fool. Know your purpose in life and follow it with all your heart.
Last edited by Dutch; 02-14-2013 at 12:36.
Peace Dutch
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Peace Dutch
GA>ME 2003
www.MakeYourGear.com
http://dutchwaregear.com[/URL]
Visit Dutchwaregear on facebook (and like it)
Check us out on Twitter @dutchwaregear
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