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Roper Buyers’ Guide

Texture, Weight and Body
How do you like a rope to feel in your hand?
If you like the rougher feel of ridges in your hand, go with a three-strand, which has 25 percent fewer crowns than a four-strand. Or try something entirely different with The Rope Shop's abrasion-resistant wax-free ropes, which you may not have to break in and which don't pick up rubber or gunk from the arena floor.

If you grew up with a big old true nylon and that feels most comfortable to you, it's still out there in ropes like Dub Grant's White Winner, King's Nylon or Classic's Gold. To get a little weight in a rope, look for poly blends, four-strands and cores.

Remember that if you take a rope and stop swinging it, it should come back round, not oblong (no matter how soft it is). If your rope doesn't have enough body, it'll feel dead when you swing and deliver it. If it has too much body, it'll feel bouncy and you'll have a tendency to wave it off or heel steers up around the belly, thus slipping legs or missing dallies.

Materials and Lays
How pliable, long-lasting and visible do you want your rope?
Different color dyes not only make a rope easier to see, but can reduce slippage at the horn and affect the way it feels to swing. Cactus dyed a few of its blue Hypnotics pink for Tough Enough to Wear Pink tight at the NFR, and Allen Bach and Clay O'Brien Cooper swear they feel even better than the blue versions.

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Poly blended into a rope can give it weight and longevity, as can lower crowns, which mean less friction. Trevor Brazile thinks pure nylon ropes are apt to be straighter, so he prefers a poly blend to give him a forward kick (the opposite of a backswing) in head ropes.

Guys like Clay Tryan and Jake Barnes subscribe to the "smaller the horns, the softer the lay" theory. But Barry Berg, who started the tiny-is-better revolution, says that to be fast on small horns, a rope doesn't need to be softer or lighter-just smaller (as long as it has enough body).

Climate
Where do you live and rope?

Ropes can stiffen in heat, so the general rule is to go softer in summer and harder in cold temperatures. Also, one rope-maker believes that it's harder to get three-strand ropes to hold their memory in the winter. Several companies claim their ropes don't change with the thermometer, including wax-free ropes, but personal experience might be the best guide.

USTRC and Wrangler Team Roping Championships heeling champ Jimmi Jo Ripsam of snowy Denver likes all-nylon ropes from Magnus Equine and Fast Back. And NFR header Brandon Beers of Oregon likes Classic's all-nylon Heat because of its climate consistency. "I roped with it at my circuit finals three weeks ago where it was 28 degrees and again at the NFR where it was 58 degrees and it still felt great," he says.

On the other hand, all-around champion of the world Trevor Brazile heads with the blended Mach 4 most of the year because he thinks all-nylon ropes don't keep their load, or forward kick, as well in colder temperatures.

Action
How hard do you throw and how far do you reach?
Defending George Strait Classic heeling champ Jhett Johnson uses a heavy, very stiff Powerline because he throws hard and that rope, with a center core, will stay open. Eight-time NFR header David Key likes his super soft Amigo four-strand because it isn't bouncy or apt to wave off.

Seventeen years ago, Sandy Stephens waved one off for Steve Purcella for big bucks, and later decided to build a rope with the action already in it. His Tip Xceleration ropes have weight at the leading edge of the loop so the top strand curls on its own around the horns and follows through under the feet.

When Trevor Brazile won the 2007 steer roping world title, he used Fast Back's Iron Silk in a 10.0 extra-soft for all 10 rounds. Brazile switched to the American texturized poly from Japanese poly because he didn't have to take as much off his delivery for it to stay open. "It's a lot easier to rope aggressive when you have something with a lot of body," he said.

Feel
What's your skill level, body size, and style?

"A beginner needs a rope to be pliable in their hand, where it's not intimidating and turns over easy, but also maintains body and longevity," said renowned clinician Tyler Magnus.

A looser-twisted rope will be more forgiving and run less at the horn. And don't forget to think about balance between your hands. Speed Williams likes an extra two feet of length, while Trevor Brazile prefers shorter ropes because he holds smaller coils.

Speaking of coils, Gary Sutton says only his and Classic's ropes rebound well in the coil area. "Most companies just load the first coils," he said. "But backswing comes from further back in the coils, so we put our load in further back."

No backswing is the No. 1 requirement of Cruel Girl champion header Taya Ellerman, who prefers an extra-soft Magnus Equine Super 4 for that reason, while Wildfire and Reno Rodeo Invitational Ladies heading champs Jamie Mader and Shea Durbin stick with Sutton's no-backswing guarantee.

Bottom line?
You want your rope working for you, not against you. It should swing freely in all seasons and feel like an extension of your hand, not its worst enemy.

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