Alrdy,
>when you cut off the excess velcro, is there still enough to make one complete revolution and close it?<
With the device already on your unit, mark your Wench at a point you feel the amount of Velcro band becomes overkill. Take the Wench off and trim this excess. You should now have enough Wench to adequately achieve a decent grasp of your shaft and also fit a medium cableclamp around its girth.
Another helpful change might be to use a thinner material for a strap loop - further reducing the girth of your Wench.
> have their been any adverse effects of this?<
I haven’t experienced any - but allow yourself enough overlap so as to ensure a decent hug without a clamp. It is entirely a personal preference but one full revolution with an extra 1 1/2” overlap works for me.
> I thought all that extra velcro had a purpose. <
The measurements given in the original instructions are really just a general size suggestion. Keep in mind that the device is meant to be modified to your personal perference and needs.
>Did the wench also bunch up below the medium clamp for you? How did you alleviate that problem?<
This is an important point. The distortion of the Velcro band under the top end of the clamp is not at all a bad thing - it is in fact a desired effect: The “dorsal bridge”. You will likely see a series of waves in the velcro band. The bottom line is that the hard edge and major pressure of the top end of your clamp not impact the dorsal region of your shaft. The distortion in the Velcro band serves as an added barrier to this potentiality.
This is not a perfect analogy, but imagine it as the interior of a peice of corrugated cardboard: The ribbed space between the two outer sheets of board does a great job of spreading/relieving/minimizing any pressure applied to either side of the board.
That this distortion of the Velcro band contacts your shaft is of no negative consequence - it in fact helps secure the Wench and prevent slippage.
As an aside (not directed at you, Alrdy) I’ll say that there seems to have developed an unrealistic fear of anything ever coming into contact with the dorsal region when hanging, but when one considers the constant contact the hand makes with this area when manual stretching it helps put things into better perspective.
The function of the Wench is to mimick the effect of the human hand: A full encirceling of the shaft with an emphasis on lateral compression. Try not to be put off by the device contacting the full circumference of your shaft - the eliptical shape of the clamp coupled with the grippers, as well as this dorsal bridge effect should do a good job of keeping you within the safe zone.
Intense and concentrated levels of pressure on the dorsal region (noose hangers as an example) is what needs to be avoided. Always keep in mind that you are responsible for the health of your unit, and you have to at all times use due caution and good sense when hanging.
A wise man once said: “The price of a big unit is eternal vigilance.”
>When the wench is on, should the grippers be at a position where they are directly facing one another (if you ran imaginary lines through them longitudingly, the two lines of the two seperate grippers should be parallel)? Is this the optimum position? <
A nice question.
Ideally every unit would be a perfect cylindrical shape and therefor respond perfectly to a “symmetrical” posistioning of the grippers. Since this is not the case, take advantage of the fact that the griippers are at all times ajustable and space them in such a way as to optimize the comfort and quality of hold they provide you with when you hang.
-Cap