Sparing you the long read, the answer is found here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2-MU34O0Vf4
it's about 56 seconds into the video. It does go over the knob but not over the continuous loop, so it is "locked" to the knob; not "over the knob" where it could slide a little way down the hammock.
******** long rambling follows ***********
The written instructions say the static loop should fit snugly over the end of the whip (at the head end). But English is a funny language - especially with words like "over". It's like when I do word puzzles with friends and they ask if the letter "x" is at the end of the word. I'm pretty sure they mean the right-hand side. But a group of letters has two "ends". Sometimes its hard to realize the different interpretations of a word when it seems so clear to you.
So does "over" mean, "...over the gather knob so it snugs in where the continuous loop leaves the hammock."? Or does it mean, "...over the gather knob so it's on the hammock side of that knob."? That's what I figured but in the morning I found the loop has slipped a little over 2 inches passed where the knob is gathered.
The instructions say the loop/cord can be tightened, but given the slippery and tapered nature of the nylon fabric at the gathered end, I'd think there would always be some slippage there.
On the other hand, if that static loop was to the right of that knob, locked in by the continuous loop leaving the hammock, it wouldn't move at all and any "give" would be via the elastic at the other end.
I'm using the lightest fabric (Thank you, Agent Moulder, it really makes a difference.) so I don't want to inadvertently stretch it beyond its design.
One more story on word interpretation. It's one of my funniest encounters when, in another lifetime, I was tech support for a database design tool. We could import comma or tab-delimited text from any other source. The instructions said to "...save the file as text ....". I got a call from a customer who said the database wouldn't import his Microsoft file. I asked if he had saved it as text and he said he had. I'll spare you the fifteen minutes of exchange as we tried different things. I could tell he wasn't arrogant or belligerent. He just wanted to get his work done. Usually, we don't venture away from our specific app - because we are not responsible for Microsoft's software (thank heaven). But I had him start from inside the MS file and save his intended output. Over the phone, I heard four key clicks. It was an eye roll, head shake moment. "What did you name that file?", I ask. "Just as the instructions said," he replied, "I saved it as 'Text'."
For the non-techies, there's a difference between the name of a file and the format of a file. When we were telling the customers to save the file as text, we weren't saying to give it the name "text", we were saying to save it in the format of text. That conversation was 26 years ago and it's in my mind just like yesterday.
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