suitable for dissimilar ropes, works well with synthetic ropes.
The simple Simon over bend is a knot belonging to the category bend. The simple Simon under holds well even with slippery synthetic ropes,[1] but is less secure than the similar simple Simon under.[2]
The difference is just whether the green working end goes over the green standing (loaded) end (Simple Simon over) or under the green standing (loaded) end (simple Simon under).
Inventor
It was invented by Dr. Harry Asher[3] and published in 1989.[4]
When I had decided that the way to try for new bends was to think of the two halves separately, and then decide how to put them together. There seemed to be no better way than to start with the two halfs that make up the famous Sheet bend ... an open loop and a single hitch.
^Geoffrey Budworth, The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Knots & Ropework (Anness Publishing Ltd., 1999,
2007), 72.
^Harry Asher, Alternative Knot Book, p. 54, Sheridan House (August 1989).
^The Knot Bible. A practical guide to the most useful nautical knots. Published by Adlard Coles Nautical, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
50 Bedford Square, London W1B 3DP, 15 Mar 2013. Format:Ebook (PDF). Edition: 1st
Extent: 288. ISBN 978-1-4081-5476-2
^Maria Costantino: Das große Knotenbuch, p. 202. Language: German. 2010 by Bassermann Verlag, Random House GmbH, München. Original English edition of "The Knot Handbook", 2000 by D&D Books. ISBN 978-3-8094-1279-3
^Harry Asher, Alternative Knot Book, p. 53, Sheridan House (August 1989).
^Asher, Harry. (1989). The alternative knot book. Sheridan House. ISBN0911378-95-2.
^Asher, Harry. (1989). The alternative knot book. Sheridan House. ISBN0911378-95-2.