Brando CalPankian
Carpal tunnel level member
- Location
- Pine City, MN
That rope looks well used as well. Degraded ropes loose a lot of strength, that's why we operate at around 10% mbs. It sounds like there were a lot of little things adding up to one big failure. Degraded ropes, improper binder termination, excessive loading by your operator, and potentially, as you mentioned, a compromised section in the rope. I've seen excessively loaded ropes melt due to stress from pulling. I try to stay away from using mechanical to pull things over if it. Has the potential to eclipse my ropes mbs. A rope winch may have helped, though it's slower. I've not seen a heavily loaded alpine butterfly run much before, but I wonder if the stretch in the rope made a weak spot? So many variables. How bad was the lean to warrant that much pull to attempt to pull it over? Was complacency an issue? How much weight was in the lean of the tree, i.e what physics were needed to get it over center? Did you send the TIP high enough to compensate for the weight? Did you have enough length to better the pull angle? Soooo many unknowns...










