pA,
Yes, there are some problems there.
First, you are using an OK grip around the skin before you wrap, too far toward the base. What I was referring to above was to grasp the tip of the head, or the head itself, and stretch out your unit before and while wrapping. Then, you can see the corona through the skin which is left over the head, right? Start your wrap one inch behind the corona. This will limit the skin taking all the stress.
I can see in the third pic, the wrap goes too close too the base, as far as skin goes. When you are finished wrapping, you want more skin behind the wrap than you show in that pic.
In the forth pic, you are doing it correctly, but you should be pulling from the head itself, and not the skin over the head, while you tighten.
Now, I think I see a bad problem, but I could be wrong: In that fourth pic, it appears that the
hanger is toed in, but in the fifth and sixth pics, the
hanger appears straight on. Are you adjusting the inner hex nuts, and then snugging down the two bottom wing nuts before you attach the
hanger? I hope so, but it appears you are using all three wing nuts as tighteners. You cannot do that. The two halves of the
hanger must be static, solid in relation to each other before you begin.
You must run the adjustment hex nuts out to the approximate setting, so that when the
hanger is tightened with the top wing nut, the top teeth mesh somewhat. The outer bottom wing nuts are simply to allow easy access to the inner hex nuts. This will take a little trial and error, but you should soon get the hang of it.
Next, in both the fifth and sixth pics, the top gap is too large. You need to adjust the inner hex nuts, to where the bottom gap is a little wider, and the top gap is less. You want the top teeth to mesh somewhat. Not completely, but close. But be sure you leave enough leeway to tighten the
hanger fully and grasp the internal structures.
In the last pic, it appears the
hanger is toed-out, as opposed to the top pic, toed in, and the middle pics, straight on. So I think you do not have the inner hex nuts working as I described above. The
hanger is not solid, and it makes it easy for your shaft to 'flow' through the
hanger, and as your caption indicates, when
weight is applied, the
hanger slips toward the head.
Because the wrap is started so far toward the base, you can really see the skin stretch in the sixth pic. I think I can also see the lig fan. This means you are attaching so far back, you may be grasping the fascial lig attachment on the shaft also. But then, you are going for tunica stretch, so that would not do you much good.
All in all, I would say the techniques are fairly good for stretching skin, but will not do much for the inner structures. But as I always say, skin is the first limiting factor. Right now, you have plenty, but at some point, you may need to remember how to stretch skin again.
I am afraid I may have butchered my explanations, so be sure to ask more questions if needed.
Good pics,
Bigger