drrich2
Contributor
Hi:
I'm one of those people who's very unintuitive with motor skills. Was the kid who couldn't do any of the yoyo tricks. Learning to tie my shoes was an ordeal. Learning to drive? Not pretty; that poor cop looked about white after a training drive with me. And the sweater they tried to make me construct in Home Ec.? Ah, a grease rag in the making, that was.
So, having acquired an SMB & a finger spool, I spent some time observing online videos of people setting up & deploying SMBs. Reminds me of when I was a kid; somebody proficient sticks his 2 hands out, there's an item with a string, his hands whir around & something special happens. And he looks at me like I should somehow have acquired this skill.
Riiiiiiiiight. So, at a website labeled 'Precision Diving' I see a page that includes this blurb on the process:
Elsewhere, there's a video where a guy deploys one. Seems brief & to the point.
I'm missing something. Being crude and 'what's the easiest brain dead simple way I can do this' in my approach, I have a burning question...
Why can't I just take the bolt snap on the end of the spool's line, quickly clamp it on that metal ring at the bottom of the SMB, and call it good?
Why the onerous task of running the bolt snap through the SMB's metal ring, then someohow a loop appears out of nowhere, then the spool goes through the loop like a worm-hole...? Do SMBs come loose from bolt snaps often?
Thanks.
Richard.
I'm one of those people who's very unintuitive with motor skills. Was the kid who couldn't do any of the yoyo tricks. Learning to tie my shoes was an ordeal. Learning to drive? Not pretty; that poor cop looked about white after a training drive with me. And the sweater they tried to make me construct in Home Ec.? Ah, a grease rag in the making, that was.
So, having acquired an SMB & a finger spool, I spent some time observing online videos of people setting up & deploying SMBs. Reminds me of when I was a kid; somebody proficient sticks his 2 hands out, there's an item with a string, his hands whir around & something special happens. And he looks at me like I should somehow have acquired this skill.
Riiiiiiiiight. So, at a website labeled 'Precision Diving' I see a page that includes this blurb on the process:
4) If the spool isn’t already attached to the SMB, the diver must attach it. Generally, most SMBs will have a small d-ring located on the bottom of them. Using the double ender of the finger spool as a weight, the diver will feed the double ender snap (with line attached) through the d-ring. Once through, the diver can pass the entire spool through loop of line at the end of the spool. Remove the double ender from the line and keep it on the right chest d-ring.
Elsewhere, there's a video where a guy deploys one. Seems brief & to the point.
I'm missing something. Being crude and 'what's the easiest brain dead simple way I can do this' in my approach, I have a burning question...
Why can't I just take the bolt snap on the end of the spool's line, quickly clamp it on that metal ring at the bottom of the SMB, and call it good?
Why the onerous task of running the bolt snap through the SMB's metal ring, then someohow a loop appears out of nowhere, then the spool goes through the loop like a worm-hole...? Do SMBs come loose from bolt snaps often?
Thanks.
Richard.