Skip to main content

Attaching the manual muscle cords

If you have a basic or full knee kit model, your kit comes with "manual muscle cords." These cords act like puppet strings, enabling you to simulate a shortening muscle by attaching the cord to a muscle attachment site and pulling on it. These cords are nonelastic (i.e., not stretchy) and thicker than the elastic muscle cords but they can attach to any of the sites where you can attach the elastic muscle cords. The manual muscle cords work best if you operate them through the cross-section plates; for muscles that don't cross through the cross-section plate (e.g., popliteus), you can just attach one end directly to the muscle's origin or insertion.

Video showing how to simulate muscle contraction using a manual muscle cord.

You'll find the manual muscle cords along the top of Parts Plate A. They come in four different colors so that you can more easily tell them apart if you have all four attached. To attach a cord to a bone, you'll also need the forceps, located at the bottom left corner of Parts Plate A.

Photo of Parts Plate A with manual muscle cords, ruler, quad muscles, and hex key attached. Arrows and labels indicate the manual muscle cords and forceps

The manual muscle cords and forceps should be attached to Parts Plate A in your kit. The manual muscle cords attach to hooks at the top of the plate and the forceps fit into a holder in the bottom left corner.

Whenever you're attaching a muscle to your knee kit, be sure that the two attachment sites have the same 3-letter muscle code, indicating they belong to the same muscle. If you're unfamiliar with the muscle abbreviation system used in your knee kit, you can review that here. Of course, you can also intentionally attach a muscle to two sites with different muscle codes to simulate a muscle that does not exist.

Attaching a manual muscle cord to a clip

To attach a manual muscle cord to one of the quadriceps tendon clips (i.e., simulating one of the quadriceps muscles), follow the steps shown in the video or listed out below.

Video showing how to attach a manual muscle cord through the cross-section plate to one of the quadriceps tendons. In this video, the manual muscle cord represents the rectus femoris muscle.

  1. Thread a manual muscle cord (the end with a simple knot, not the looped end) through one of the quadriceps attachment holes/sites in the superior cross-section plate (i.e., REF, VAI, VAL, or VAM).

    Photo of superior cross-section plate, inferior view. With arrows indicating holes for quads?


  2. Continue pulling the cord through the cross-section plate until it reaches whichever quadriceps tendon clip you want to attach it too (i.e., REF-B, VAI-E, VAL-D, or VAM-D). Insert the end of the cord through the hole in the clip, ensuring that you insert the cord through the labeled side (i.e., you should see the label as you're inserting the cord). Photo of hands inserting a manual muscle cord into a quadriceps tendon clip showing how the cord must be inserted through the labeled side of the clip first

  3. To secure cord in the clip, guide the cord into the slot of the clip and pull until the knot locks into place. Photo of hands pulling a manual muscle cord into the slot of a quadriceps tendon clip to secure the knot in place

Whenever you're pulling manual muscle cords through the cross-section plate, pull directly backward (not upward). If you pull upward, the cord will pull up on the cross-section plate, possibly lifting it out of the bracket (see image below).

Photo of hands pulling on two manual muscle cords with arrows and text indicating that the cords should be pulled directly backward from the cross-section plate

Attaching a manual muscle cord to a bone

To attach a manual muscle cord to a bone, follow the steps shown in the video or listed out below.

Video showing how to attach a manual muscle cord through the cross-section plate to a muscle attachment site on a bone. In this video, the manual muscle cord represents the semimembranosus muscle.

  1. Thread a manual muscle cord (the end with a simple knot, not the looped end) through an attachment hole/site in one of the cross-section plates for the muscle that you want to simulate.

    Photo of superior and inferior cross-section plates, with letter labels visible?


  2. Continue pulling the cord through until it reaches the attachment hole/site where you want to attach the muscle. Use forceps to push the knot into the attachment hole. The knot should be pushed fully below the surface of the bone, into the hole. Photo of forceps pushing a manual muscle cord knot into an attachment hole on a bone

  3. Pull the cord into the hole slot until the knot is caught by the hook inside the hole and the cord is secured (you might feel the knot "click" into place). If the knot pulls out of the hole when you do this, you might need to hold the knot inside the hole with the forceps while pulling on the cord to keep it in place. Photo of a manual muscle cord attached to a bone with an arrow and text indicating the direction to pull the cord to lock the knot into the attachment

  4. To make it easier to detach the cord later, leave the cord's "tail" (the bit of cord after the knot) sticking out of the hole. Photo of a manual muscle cord inserted into an attachment hole with the tail of the cord sticking out