In addition to being a useful rope-grab for rope-rescue applications, Prusiks are popular for: • (right). Both are used as rappel backups.
Rappel Backup/Self-Belay Below The Device: A Prusik is placed below the descender and controlled with the brake hand. It acts as an automatic 'dead man's handle' should the climber be incapacitated or need to use both hands. Careful setup of the
rappel backup is critical. An '
autoblock' or 'French Prusik' knot is most widely used in this application. •
Rappel Backup/Self-Belay Above The Device: A Prusik is placed above the descender and controlled with the hand not being used as the brake hand. This configuration allows an easier and faster transition from rappelling to climbing the rope, but can also result in the Prusik locking tight as the amount of friction required to hold the load at that point is far higher than that experienced by a
self-belay below the device. •
Prusiking or ascending the line: Two Prusiks used in tandem can be used to climb a fixed rope. One Prusik is attached to the belay loop sewn onto the front of a harness, and the other attached below that is a longer length of cord reaching to one foot. The climber can then stand up in the foot loop, slide the Prusik hitch of the waist loop further up the rope and then "sit" down on it. Once in the sitting position, the climber can slide the foot loop up the rope and repeat the process. •
Escaping the Belay: In a lead-climbing situation, should the climber become incapacitated in a position where they cannot be safely lowered to the ground, the belayer must
escape the belay in order to effect rescue. After locking the rope in the belay device with one hand, the belayer can tie a Prusik to the rope with the other hand, and then use the Prusik loop to transfer the load to a fixed anchor. The belayer can then go to effect rescue or get help. •
Rescue Applications: Rope rescue teams, such as in
swiftwater rescue or in high-angle technical rescue, use a Prusik hitch as a 'ratchet' or
progress capture device. A Prusik with a
Prusik minding pulley is used to hold a load while tensioning a line. The pulley advances the Prusik up the line and prevents it from going back out. This can be used to raise a patient or tension a
highline for a
Tyrolean traverse, or in
boat-on-tether and similar rescue operations. •
Handcuffsthumb|Bosun's or Prusik handcuffs A length of rope that has been tied so that the Prusik knot is tied around itself leaving two large loops can be quickly used as handcuffs by slipping the loops around the detainee's hands and pulling the running ends tight and securing them with a square knot. When the detainee attempts to pull his hands apart, the Prusik tightens in the same way as when it is tied to another rope. To create Prusik handcuffs, tie a loose Prusik around one of your fingers and then slip it off, leaving the knot shape intact. Then slip the free ends of the rope through the "hole" in the knot where your finger used to be. Alternatively, use a
handcuff knot, which is the more usual knot to accomplish this task. •
Testing rigs for tensile strength and pull force: RepRap researchers have used the Prusik knot to secure a fiber in order to measure the pull force of an
extruder mechanism and estimate the tensile strength of a fiber. == When to carry (climbing, kayaking) ==