Kuba, what’s your problem? He couldn’t get results he liked with the Domanoff machine, which I personally don’t think is suitable for making good rope either, anyway it’s just a matter of taste – and yet you keep insisting. Surely you could just accept that. I don’t understand.
Just be happy for him that he’s happy now and is getting the results he wanted.
I don't want to argue. I refrained from adding the opinion i had prepared.
But, he want truth...
Totally agree. But this guy was starting to go a bit too far.
Maybe you're the ones who are insisting and trying to hype him up, saying it's good, when the truth is a bit different?
You even use Domanoff's table for rope diameters and thread thickness to make these ropes? He's the author, right?
Is this deliberately misleading people into thinking it can't be done on another ropewalk?Reading this thread, I'm simply deceived because it hasn't shown anything else that can be done on the Domanoff ropewalk.
Just as you think it's weak, i too can have my own opinion and not accept another solution.Saying something "can't be done" on a Domanoff treadmill and then doing essentially the same thing on another machine is simply hypocrisy. You can have your preferences and not like the machine – but presenting it as the absolute truth is a completely different matter
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So far, it hasn't performed any better than a typical rope from a planetary ropewalk.
I understand that you have to keep an eye on your customer, but let's not exaggerate.
Perhaps it would be appropriate to say that this rope is bad, too melted on individual strands?
It has been tightened several times, as evidenced by the strand failures?
Let's give people honest information and freedom of choice, instead of imposing a single narrative.
