Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
A) that can be said of all devices, right?Looks like a self-aware user could try using a regular rope wrench and split tail tether with the device.
"That swivel connection doesn't seem too crazy." said someone who likes swivels.
A wrench would certainly help reduce the probability of unexpected drops from branch contact. Will be interesting to see how it tests with drops. I think it was Richard Mumford who has a video of the Unicender (years ago) hitting it from above and showing it grabbing quickly again. Will this do the same?That video shows and gives a lot more more detail than the ADHD quick-cut videos up to this point, that's nice.
That 'friction chain' when pressed from the top sure looks sensitive, thought probably behaves differently when actually weighted. Obviously he's showing you are supposed to sort of grab the whole thing (don't pinch your gloves...) but it does make me wonder about it getting caught on a branch leading to an unexpected drop depending on how sensitive it winds up being.
I'm mostly curious about running it solo verses with a wrench above it, as it seems like those two options will behave very differently. All previous devices I'm familiar with are designed to work one way or the other, not both.
It is more like a Hitch Hiker.It probably would grab again quickly. My limited experience with mechanicals has me thinking it could be touchy and grabbing with the whole hand helps moderate.
Sounds like the links are basically the trigger to a slipping cam.
I never could get the uni to work with me. The squeeze mode worked great on ddrt but on single it took ALOT of force to break and once it broke the jump to descent was quick and hard to moderate. In wrap mode with the Mumford mod I still had to push slack into it. Got frustrated and gave up.
Adding the wrench would probably take the sensitivity away, but didnt the guy suggest the opposite? Saying it’s better for fast descents and swings with the apex?
I’m starting to think of this as a hitchhiker type of device where wraps and links are analogous.
I took that to mean you have more control with the Apex/wrench?...
Adding the wrench would probably take the sensitivity away, but didnt the guy suggest the opposite? Saying it’s better for fast descents and swings with the apex?
....
CRIC'n ???Looks like it'd be all warm and fuzzy with CRIC'n around too - that's one thing that I like about the AK2 and HitchClimber Pulley . . .
Just picked one up for myself. I like it but it’s fumbly with gloves on and I wish the opening was a little bigger, easier to accept my Yale 11.7sCRIC'n - this little thing has changed the way I flounce around in trees lately. For 3:1's it's pretty cool. So CRIC'n
I do find 11.5's like Drayer Tango StatX fill it (the CRIC) up until you put the rope under tension - then things smooth up. Sorry - didn't mean to derail the ISC thred a bit.Just picked one up for myself. I like it but it’s fumbly with gloves on and I wish the opening was a little bigger, easier to accept my Yale 11.7s
Self adjusting friction is a huge boon with the Reflex. Another is the cue taken from DMM's Eccentric pulley. While not as pronounced as the Eccentric, the Reflex allows the rope to fairlead into the device, from any angle, with minimum friction. This can't be said for any other mechanical on the market and I bet a thousand dollars that Reg's one is the same.We are truly living in unprecedented times. How many new device releases is that this year? 4? (Akimbo 2, Blackbird, Throttle, Reflex) Was the Vertec this year or last? Either way we're being spoiled and we still have Reg's device on the horizon.
Does this device have a similar feel and responsiveness in both SRS and MRS? I have found that certain devices that really shine at SRS can be unbearable sluggish in MRS.Self adjusting friction is a huge boon with the Reflex. Another is the cue taken from DMM's Eccentric pulley. While not as pronounced as the Eccentric, the Reflex allows the rope to fairlead into the device, from any angle, with minimum friction. This can't be said for any other mechanical on the market and I bet a thousand dollars that Reg's one is the same.
Pulling out slack in a straight line is one thing. Descending in three dimensions requires a 270 degree gentle bend radius at the bottom of the device.