Posted on 02/05/2013 8:25:08 AM PST by Responsibility2nd
..went through there a couple of years ago—it’s a Third World city...
They might have wrapped the rope around their hands, it slipped when the tension came, the fingers were still in the loop and both sides were still pulling. Awful, I hope they didn’t loose too many however it happened.
Freegards
Probably wrapped the rope around their hand or fingers as well.
Some folks take tug of war seriously
I remember several years back a school or church group had a HUGE tug-of war competition using a large nylon rope. There were like a hundred or more people on that rope. The rope snapped and people towards the middle of the rope lost most of their fingers. Just about everyone got injured with severe rope burns and lacerations on their hands.
DO NOT wrap the rope around your hand!!
See post 26 for another possible explanation.
“How can one (or several) not let go of a rope?”
A rope wrapped around a hand will tighten as it gets pulled and you can’t let go.
Basic rope safety -— don’t wrap around your hand.
Apparently, no one there grew up on a farm.
Cheap nylon rope, wrapped around their knuckles and fingers. Sailors and fishermen are well aware of the hazards associated with handling rope like this.
I am guessing they were using small diameter (1/2 inch or smaller) rope.
If they had twisted a half-turn or more around their hands/wrists...that would do it. You couldn’t let go with tension on the rope.
They may have wrapped the rope around their hands.
I know a lady who has had horses all of her life & rides every day.
She has only 2 fingers * her thumb on one hand because she wrapped a lead rope around her hand & the young horse in training pulled back really hard.
People who handle horses are always taught NEVER to wrap the lead rope around your hand—too dangerous.
It’s all fun and games until someone loses a finger.
What happens next week when a student gets a paper cut? Ban rope! Ban paper! Heck, just ban schools and put everyone in a bubble.
People don’t think about the incredible pulling strength of 20 or more people.
I seem to recall reading about this happening before but with middle school students.
Most likely, the line was some synthetic material and participants had wrapped it around their hands to get a better grip. I suspect that several hundred pounds of force would be enough to sever fingers.
Here’s the incident that I recalled from some years past:
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/1995/jun/07/2-boy-scouts-die-when-tug-of-war-rope-snaps/
In this incident, 650 Scouts were pulling on the rope. Assuming that each Scout could generate, say, twenty pounds of force, that would be 6500 pounds in each direction. That’s over THREE TONS of force. If the Scouts tried to coordinate while jerking on the rope, they might generate twice that amount, or SIX TONS.
I remember a co-worker years ago who was applying compressed air to a plastic container that was roughly a one-foot-cube. The pressure regulator was reading about 15 psi, when it dawned on me that somebody should consider the forces involved. Each face of the cube would consist of 144 inches, so that total force on that face would be roughly 15 times 150 or OVER TWO THOUSAND POUNDS. Just as I was about to warn him that he was doing something foolish, the back of the box was blown off against the nearby wall.
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