JTree
Participating member
- Location
- East Texas
Ok, so I'd like a way to add more friction at the rigging point. It's safeblock vs triple thimble, vs thunder sling, vs aerial friction brake, vs the rest of the world's worth of gear devoted to the purpose.
As a recovering climbing gear junkie, I don't want to buy everything only to find when X, Y, and Z are in the toolbox, 95% of the time I only use X.
What I usually work: tall pines without a lot of canopy, large spreading hardwoods (more oaks than anything recently) usually in backyards or other areas where I win the bids over the guys who mainly use lifts. Usually moderately sensitive sites where armoring or rigging is needed for 80% of the cuts.
Usual work situation: 1 or 2 groundies who only halfway know what they are doing. I spend about 20% of my day managing their time and double checking their work to make sure things are right. I can't trust them to big loads anymore, because none of them have run enough rope to be able to reliably let it run and not shock it after it clears the climber's danger zone. So nothing very heavy is being dropped into the system I'm looking to buy. Probably going to be using 1/2" rope for the next year except during the spar work.
What I'm thinking: if I have a way to take over lowering, it could feasibly speed up the work significantly over my current practices. Keeping one meathead dragging brush and keeping the other guy landing pieces and keeping the drop zone clear of brush and rope might go a long way to putting better profit margin in my jobs. Instead of having to pull the meathead off brush detail to let the guy running the porty explain what needs to happen with the tag line while he is lowering.
Ok collective, who's bought it all and knows where my dime should be spent?
As a recovering climbing gear junkie, I don't want to buy everything only to find when X, Y, and Z are in the toolbox, 95% of the time I only use X.
What I usually work: tall pines without a lot of canopy, large spreading hardwoods (more oaks than anything recently) usually in backyards or other areas where I win the bids over the guys who mainly use lifts. Usually moderately sensitive sites where armoring or rigging is needed for 80% of the cuts.
Usual work situation: 1 or 2 groundies who only halfway know what they are doing. I spend about 20% of my day managing their time and double checking their work to make sure things are right. I can't trust them to big loads anymore, because none of them have run enough rope to be able to reliably let it run and not shock it after it clears the climber's danger zone. So nothing very heavy is being dropped into the system I'm looking to buy. Probably going to be using 1/2" rope for the next year except during the spar work.
What I'm thinking: if I have a way to take over lowering, it could feasibly speed up the work significantly over my current practices. Keeping one meathead dragging brush and keeping the other guy landing pieces and keeping the drop zone clear of brush and rope might go a long way to putting better profit margin in my jobs. Instead of having to pull the meathead off brush detail to let the guy running the porty explain what needs to happen with the tag line while he is lowering.
Ok collective, who's bought it all and knows where my dime should be spent?










