Here's a picture from earlier today, 9 cables in the tree, two failed. They were all old and quite rusty.
This picture also answers a question earlier from Outofmytree; by the way, thank you for popping in and contributing.
The type of termination attached to the J-lag is called a traditional splice and can be used with J-lags or amon eye thru-bolts. It must be used incorporating a thimble, as this one is.
To perform this splice, you unwrap the cable 4 or 6 inches, create a bight in the cable, that is, bend the cable around the thimble where it is still intact, at a place a couple inches this side of where it was unwrapped. You now have intact cable going up one side of the thimble, around, and backdown the other side,
then it opens up into the 7 individual strands.
Take one strand, bend it 90 degrees and begin wrapping it tightly around both the remaining 6 strands and the incoming, intact cable. When you go around three or 4 times, cut it, take strand #2, bend it 90 degrees, wrap it tightly around the remaining 5 strands and adjacent incoming cable. Repeat with strands 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 until all have been wound around.
You can not use EHS (Extra High Strength) cable with this method. EHS doesn't bend well. EHS has the benefit of a much higher tensile strength and assumed longevity, but until the wedge and taper system, the only termination option was with spiral wraps (dead ends) and those could be employed with either J-lags or amon eye thru bolts, and again a thimble must also be used.
The rigguy system offers a new option with the benefit of minimal hardware (just the block and taper) and a very small diameter hole that has to be drilled since it is only the
cable that fits through the hole, not larger diameter hardware, and it terminated from the backside in a different manner, but the same as a thru-bolt/washer/nut system.