C and D look like very secure knots, but neither can be tied in the bight and both look like they would be very hard to untie after load.
When the weather improves in a couple of days I intend to do a break test on B. It will probably be similar in strength to A, but I hope it crawls a lot less under load. Crawling, per se, doesn't indicate a knot is weak--the strongest loop I have tested to date is the dbl fisherman's, and it crawled far more than weaker knots like the bowline or alpine butterfly. (The crawling came from the coils tightening up, not the tail creeping in). My problem with crawling is my uninformed guess that crawling in a tight knot damages the rope. Whether or not there is anything to this, it will be interesting to see if B performs differently from A.
When the weather improves in a couple of days I intend to do a break test on B. It will probably be similar in strength to A, but I hope it crawls a lot less under load. Crawling, per se, doesn't indicate a knot is weak--the strongest loop I have tested to date is the dbl fisherman's, and it crawled far more than weaker knots like the bowline or alpine butterfly. (The crawling came from the coils tightening up, not the tail creeping in). My problem with crawling is my uninformed guess that crawling in a tight knot damages the rope. Whether or not there is anything to this, it will be interesting to see if B performs differently from A.