Can nylon ropes fail from bend fatigue?
Everyone knows that bending a paperclip back and forth will eventually cause it to break. This is due to a process called fatigue. And while this answer discusses the elastic limits for fatigue, I don't know if that directly applies to the bending of the rope/cord through knots and movement over parts, etc.
So can nylon ropes fail from being bent like metals, or do they only fail from repeated/excessive forces? In other words, if I bend a rope back and forth a bunch am I increasing its risk of failure?
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1 answer
In theory maybe, in practice no. UV damage is a bigger threat to ropes.
Climbers repeatedly tie knots (which temporarily reduce the strength of a rope) into the ends of a rope. Then they proceed to fall on that rope with often high amounts of force repeatedly. Their ropes don't break due to the strain and repeated knots.
Sailors will sail with nylon ropes in their rigging, at times these ropes might flog in the wind. The flogging ends don't break off because of repeated bending/flogging. Similarly loads secured to a trailer or vehicle will flog in the wind. The ends of these ropes don't snap off either.
At the end of the day a rope is like a woven product in that many smaller fibers work together to become a whole that is stronger than the parts. This lets individual fibers fail due to fatigue, excess load, abrasion, UV rays, etc. without really affecting the whole until a critical mass has been reached. In general I would expect a rope to withstand at least as many bends as your shirt, aka lots.
Something else to consider, in general the fibers in a rope won't be bent like the metal in a paper clip. The woven nature of the rope will allow the fibers to pull slightly in the weave so the pressure is exerted over a larger area than a similar bend in a paper clip. Also nylon fibers, I believe, have some elasticity. This allows them to stretch. Metals or rigid plastics are typically what you think of "fatiguing." That is because they don't have the same amount of elasticity. I believe this elasticity is what allows a rubber band to bend without fatigue.
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/a/9699. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
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