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According to the June 99 version of the ACMG Technical Handbook, "The girth hitch can create a pulley effect on large objects."szymiec wrote:I nearly failed an acmg course because one of my 3 anchor points was a sewn sling girthed around a tree. The guide told me it is significantly weekend by the large diameter of the tree. Im 99% sure it has nothing to do with friction
szymiec wrote:I think that as the diameter of the tree or whatever increases, the angle on the sling where it meets increases creating an outward direction of pull that will stress the union on the girth hitch.
STeveA wrote:I tried to visualize where the sling would end up under a heavy load. I think my diagram is correct. The load is F2. If you put the hitch towards the back of the tree it will rotate until it ends up where I show it. The only thing keeping it in place at the back of the tree would be friction, which may well be enough, however I think the greatest forces on the Girth hitch would occur under the theoretical frictionless system in which case the sling will rotate until the forces equalize.
Fred wrote:I use it all the time.
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