How to Use Rope for a Zip Line
Things You'll Need
- Static rope
- 4 carabiners
- 2 slings
- Pulley
- Harness (optional)
Instructions
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1
Anchor the zip line rope to the upper anchor with a knot that forms a nonclosing loop. Stable knots include a double bowline or a figure of eight on a bight (see the Resources section). Clip a carabiner into the body of the knot so that the knot cannot seize too tightly to be untied.
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2
Tie a sling around the lower anchor with a water knot or a double fisherman's bend to serve as a secure loop. Clip a carabiner around the loop to act as the lower anchor master point.
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3
Tie an alpine butterfly knot in the zip line approximately 5 feet short of the lower anchor master point. The alpine butterfly knot creates a loop that will not close tightly and is easy to untie after heavy loading. Clip a carabiner through the loop in the alpine butterfly knot.
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4
Put tension on the rope at the lower anchor by passing the free end of the rope through the master point and then through the carabiner in the alpine butterfly knot and pulling tight. This arrangement creates a three-to-one advantage to tighten the rope, effectively multiplying your strength by three and allowing you to tighten the rope further than you would be able to do by hand.
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5
Secure the free end of the rope to the master point with an anchoring knot such as a clove hitch or a round turn and two half hitches. Optionally, use the remainder of the rope to build redundancy into the system by passing the rope around the lower anchor itself and tying another anchoring knot.
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6
Ride the zip line. Load the pulley onto the zip line, clip a carabiner into the pulley and clip a sling into the carabiner. If the zip line is low to the ground, like following a sloping hillside, the rider can hang on to the sling. If the zip line is high off the ground at any point, the rider should clip into the sling with a harness.
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