@fish73; I don't own the Compact Bulldog Bone (yet), but I'm wondering if adding a friction device like a Figure 8 low alongside your hip might take some of the load off of the Bone and give you a better experience on the long descents?
If it worked, it would provide the safety of having a device that automatically grabs the rope to stop you if your hand were to get bumped off of the Figure 8 accidentally.
Also, forgive me if you've mentioned this already, but you have tried going in the other direction and closing the Bone bollard up tighter, haven't you? Like I say, I don't own one, so I'm just trying to run through all of the possible options, just in case the answer is counterintuitive.
Another experiment I would want to try would be to use a knee ascender to push my weight up slightly to "unload" the Bone so much, and see if that makes it easier to break it free. The problem with that idea is that you'd still need to be able to get the knee ascender off the line shortly thereafter. This is something I would attempt "low and slow", not while high in the tree, on the first attempt.
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EDIT: I just thought of a possible answer, that eliminates the problem of getting the knee ascender off of the rope. Try using a foot lock to push yourself up the rope a little bit, while at the same time pulling down on the Compact Bulldog Bone's release lever. Then just let the rope slip through your feet once you get going. I bet this will work; I don't know why I didn't think of it first.
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That's all I can think of. Thanks for listening.
Tim