@tylerpienta Thise is a girth hitch, there will be no movement of the line and thus no melting while tightening the line. I have done this many times before, both slacklining and climbing. Any type of knot is a nylon on nylon connection, it's not a problem if there's effectively no movement.
@b4igetu how about if you have a basement with a concrete floor or in your garage and put in 2 concrete bolts on each side the make equalized anchors then use the a- frame
@unicuber One way I was thinking of doing it was using 50+ gallons of water in a barrel or garbage can. This should be 417lbs of weight. I don't know if this is enough weight yet to figure it out. Or sand instead of water. I have seen pics of both but they put it on a pallet. What I was thinking was putting the webbing under the barrel of sand/water. Sand would be best in the house in case it does tip then you won't have expensive water damage.
This is a great video, thanks :) I'm trying to figure out a frame I could build that I could use indoors, like during the winter months...I wouldn't be able to use the stakes, of course, I'm gonna need to find another way to anchor it solidly. But this video has given me some ideas, so thanks again!
@tylerpienta Thise is a girth hitch, there will be no movement of the line and thus no melting while tightening the line. I have done this many times before, both slacklining and climbing. Any type of knot is a nylon on nylon connection, it's not a problem if there's effectively no movement.
dexterxc001 2 months ago
nylon on nylon is probably #1 worst thing you could do!
it could burn through with the friction of tightening it!
tylerpienta 5 months ago
@b4igetu how about if you have a basement with a concrete floor or in your garage and put in 2 concrete bolts on each side the make equalized anchors then use the a- frame
tylerpienta 5 months ago
I want one indoors :)... any way to do that?
PromosbyRicochet 7 months ago
@unicuber One way I was thinking of doing it was using 50+ gallons of water in a barrel or garbage can. This should be 417lbs of weight. I don't know if this is enough weight yet to figure it out. Or sand instead of water. I have seen pics of both but they put it on a pallet. What I was thinking was putting the webbing under the barrel of sand/water. Sand would be best in the house in case it does tip then you won't have expensive water damage.
b4igetu 1 year ago
This is a great video, thanks :) I'm trying to figure out a frame I could build that I could use indoors, like during the winter months...I wouldn't be able to use the stakes, of course, I'm gonna need to find another way to anchor it solidly. But this video has given me some ideas, so thanks again!
unicuber 1 year ago