Why does shaking a rope fast make tiny ripples but shaking it slow makes big rolls?

Grab one end of a long rope and shake it slow — big, lazy rolls travel down it. Now shake it fast — suddenly it's tiny crowded ripples. Same rope, same arm. So what changed? Let's shake it and find out.

1Two things to notice first

A wave has a speed it can't beat, and a shake has a rhythm

You only need two ideas. Watch each one:

A wave travels at a fixed speed

Make one bump and watch it crawl down the rope. Its travel speed is set by the rope itself — how tight and how heavy it is. Your hand can't make that one bump go any faster.

How often you shake

Every down-and-up of your hand makes one new wave. Shake quickly and you launch lots of waves a second. Shake slowly and you launch only a few.

2Two ways to shake

Lazy rolls vs crowded ripples

The same rope can carry two very different-looking waves, just from how fast your hand moves:

Shake slow

Long lazy rolls

Few waves on the rope, but each one is a long, spread-out hump.

Shake fast

Short crowded ripples

Lots of waves on the rope, but each one is a tiny, squished ripple.

3Your turn — be the shaking hand

Drag the speed and watch one rope wiggle

Slide your shake from slow to fast and watch the rope. The little number tells you how many whole waves fit on the rope right now. You can even hear the shake as a note.

👋 your handfar end of the rope →
SLOWFAST
waves on the rope right now: 3

4Now race them

Two ropes, two shakers — one slow, one fast 🏁

Two identical ropes. The top one is shaken slow, the bottom one fast. We'll mark one crest on each (the bright dot) and race them to the far end. Guess first — then start the race.

Guess before you race

Both crests leave the hand at the very same moment. Which dot reaches the far end first — the one on the fast-shaken rope, the one on the slow-shaken rope, or do they tie?