Hey guys, I believe I’ve come up with a new variation of a uni knot. I’ve been using it to connect my braided line to my fluorocarbon leader and it seems to be a great knot so far. Would love for some other fisherman to try it and let me know how they like it. It’s super quick and easy to tie. A tackle shop owner mentioned that I should enter it into some sort of contest or something. I’ve never heard of knot competitions aside from in the Boy Scouts etc. He said people enter their knots and then test the knot strength with a machine. Any of yall ever heard of such competition? It’s a very practical knot and impressed an avid knot tyer that I know whom is not easily impressed.
I’m not so sure that “Making it your own” ranks high on the list of knot sharing with the world. If it is indeed new then you will be accorded credit here, for whatever that is worth to you.
I would recommend that you present it to us in drawing or photo format, giving any descriptive wording that you feel helps to make it possible to manipulate to your form and possibly what its most endearing attributes are.
You can email the pictures to me (or anyone of your choice) by clicking on the member’s name and navigating to their clickable email address and we can present it for you, since you’ve not reached the minimum posts to do so yourself, yet.
Very interesting idea ! A Gordian-knot-like mechanism, where the mere presence of the volume of a stopper ( in this case, of the overhand knot ) or of any other knotted structure ( be it topologically equivalent to the unknot, or not ) works as an obstacle, which prevents slippage. I am not a fisherman ( not any more… :)), so I am not qualified to answer your questions. However, I have recently used a similar idea in a more complex TIB English knot :
You can replace the overhand knot with any other stopper - but I believe that you need a TIB stopper, so you can insert it in any point of the main braided line you wish, without having to tuck the whole line, with its leaders and hooks, through the bight… Now, the problem with those stoppers is that they are much bulkier than you wish them to be…
If you can not tie an overhand or any other non-TIB stopper, and you do not want a much bulkier TIB stopper, you can always use a humble nipping loop, which can work in the same way : as an obstacle. In fact, that is the way it works in the case of the bowline : As an anchor at some point of the Standing part, on which we can attach the returning eyeleg. The inner friction of this anchor prevents it from “walking” down, towards the tip of the eye.
This idea reminds me of a few things mentioned at the thread about the “What is a knot” question :