Okay, thanx for the advice, Pole! :)
I might be willing to give the cable clamp a shot...
now if I only knew what it is called in my native tongue (finnish) I could acquire one for myself! I wouldn't want to go to a hardware store and come back home with a pair of garden shears though... maybe there is a pic of them somewhere?

As long as you feel your erection still slowely subsiding I don't see any danger for this

Yeah, it went down after about 5 minutes, although I suppose it would have stayed rigid longer with a more effective torniquet (the shoe lace tends to loosen somewhat and allow some circulation no matter how tight the knot is).
 
Shafty,

you will have a hard time to find cable clamps(see SWM's avatar f.pic) in continental europe. I don't have one my own:(
I use a standard hose clamp with sufficient wrapping. It's basically the same, just slower to tie/untie.
 
"Tourniquet" is a total constriction of the blood flow. There's a 5-minute oxygen deficiency window, and a 10-minute oxygen deprivation window. Between these two time periods, there's cellular death. So, tissue death is pretty likely from 5 minutes on.

When using the Length Master, the plates are commonly strapped onto the penis, commonly at the top and bottom of the penis, and there's a restrictive and non-constrictive event occurring. Blood is still flowing, but very slowly. 10 to 15 minutes is the recommended time for the tissues to remain under compression, not constriction. 20 minutes is really pushing it. By simply relaxing the plates to ease compression every 10 minutes, that's more than enough to keep going as long as you want without removing the plates completely.
 
"Tourniquet" is a total constriction of the blood flow. There's a 5-minute oxygen deficiency window, and a 10-minute oxygen deprivation window. Between these two time periods, there's cellular death. So, tissue death is pretty likely from 5 minutes on.

When using the Length Master, the plates are commonly strapped onto the penis, commonly at the top and bottom of the penis, and there's a restrictive and non-constrictive event occurring. Blood is still flowing, but very slowly. 10 to 15 minutes is the recommended time for the tissues to remain under compression, not constriction. 20 minutes is really pushing it. By simply relaxing the plates to ease compression every 10 minutes, that's more than enough to keep going as long as you want without removing the plates completely.
💯
 
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