Buntline hitch

Buntline hitch
Left: Buntline hitch
Right: Slipped buntline hitch
NamesBuntline hitch, Stunsail tack bend,[1] Studding sail tack bend, Inside clove hitch
CategoryHitch
RelatedClove hitch, Two half-hitches, Lobster buoy hitch, Corned beef knot
ReleasingJamming
ABoK#55, #397, #1229, #1711, #1712, #1807, #1838, #1847, #1918, #2408

The buntline hitch is a knot used for attaching a rope to an object. It is formed by passing the working end around an object, then making a clove hitch around the rope's standing part and taking care that the turns of the clove hitch progress towards the object rather than away from it. Secure and easily tied, the buntline hitch will jam when subjected to extreme loads. Given the knot's propensity to jam, it is often made in slipped form.

The buntline hitch, when bent to a yard, makes a more secure knot than two half hitches, but is more liable to jam. It differs from two half hitches in that the second half hitch is inside instead of outside the first one.

  1. ^ "Sailing & The Tech Dinghy Instruction Manual" (Revised ed.). Massachusetts Institute of Technology Nautical Association (MITNA). 1995 [1981]. Retrieved 2015-06-10.
  2. ^ Ashley, Clifford W. (1944). The Ashley Book of Knots, p.295. Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-04025-3.