rmgill
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Doesn't it depend on the way you lay the cable. In some cases, the rigging shows the final cable attached to the block which will double it's load. Shouldn't each connecting point be one equivalent part of the rig?
This load calculator has me thinking about this.
The load is divided by the number of lines pulling back and forth.
A simple redirect is double the weight on the redirecting block at a close angle.
A block moving with the load back to the winch is equal to the load, line load is now 1/2 (weight lines divided by 2)
Blocks will have their load based on how many lines run to them. If the block is used as an attachment point, for the line at the load AND as a redirect, then the load of the lines will be the load on the blocks, three lines on that block and you've got 3 parts of the load (3 lines and a 10,000 lb load and that's 10,000lbs on that block). Only two lines through a block and it's now 2/3s of the load.
So this set up, should have 5,000 lbs on the pulleys, (2 lines through @ 2500 lbs per line).
This load calculator has me thinking about this.
The load is divided by the number of lines pulling back and forth.
A simple redirect is double the weight on the redirecting block at a close angle.
A block moving with the load back to the winch is equal to the load, line load is now 1/2 (weight lines divided by 2)
Blocks will have their load based on how many lines run to them. If the block is used as an attachment point, for the line at the load AND as a redirect, then the load of the lines will be the load on the blocks, three lines on that block and you've got 3 parts of the load (3 lines and a 10,000 lb load and that's 10,000lbs on that block). Only two lines through a block and it's now 2/3s of the load.
So this set up, should have 5,000 lbs on the pulleys, (2 lines through @ 2500 lbs per line).
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