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Oh that is the author. Now I get the drift. Still undechiperable. Blah blah evo....Dude spidy rocks! OG buzzer with more experience in his little finger than all ya all young blood rockstars combined
Has to be spidy, no one else can write such an informative, technical, correct confusing as hell post
Now this is my type of post. Over ANALysis is just way too much for me.....Now I'm certainly no Spidey, but here's a simple solution from a simple-minded simpleton. If hanging in your side-dees hurts, don't do it?
The reason doing so hurts is because your side-dees are simply not intended for suspension. K.I.S.S. mutherfuckers!
Yep. For me one of the most important virtues a tool or technique must possess is simplicity.Now this is my type of post. Over ANALysis is just way too much for me.....
I am that type of climber. I like efficient simple methods and gear.Yep. For me one of the most important virtues a tool or technique must possess is simplicity.
Bosun seat would be sitting in the chair/ rump seat.
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Hanging from D's isn't natural sitting, and presses on ribs, limiting air also.
i use side D's as secondary TITS, also functioning as anti sway while main support is overhead tie.
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Nice trick though in some tuff spots is (with tight belt, sometimes quick suspender on it from slings, throw under branch standing on, bend knees, then tighten lanyard,then tighten legs pressing leg force up against lanyard restriction for fair lock in place,but tiring. Like to also have overhead lifeline failsafe,usually not at friendly angle if reaching for this trick. Unfriendly off balancing overhead support isn't hard to fall prey to. At 15 degrees deflection 25% of line tension is pulling you sideway/off balance, at 30 degrees deflection angle of lifeline, 50% of line tension is trying to pull you off balance sideways. These are sine values, and start from Zer0 at pure inline overhead support, but any deflection makes immediate fast changing change, most volatile at this end of the scale (near inline).
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Compression/push at this angle would push you away from support/back inline to own self.
BUT tension pulls to it's own inline, (whereby compression side force pushes further out of line) so pulls you out of own inline, trying to align you under support.
@
*useless info*
Sir, of all of your posts I've ever read, both here and on the Tree House forum, the one you just made above was the easiest (for me) to understand. I don't know if you have changed, or if I have. Maybe you tried to proofread the above post before hitting the post button. Whatever it was you did, please keep it up, and try to improve on it further. We all want to learn what it is that you have to teach, but you need to meet us half way. Thanks for being a TreeBuzz member, and posting on this forum.
Tim
“ If you cannot explain it in 23 words, you cannot explain it,”
Alex Shigo
Tony
Interesting, funny rule. To reply to the OP
“If it hurts dont do it. D-rings load forward, suspension rings let you hang.”
This is going to make threads interesting in the future
Alone, in this tough environment, I think should know how much can tolerate so long.
Sometimes only way to find where the line be , is to step across line and hear buzzer go off!
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Then any time finding or choosing to be so compromised and what percentage of shared support of weight is on front D's, and clock in head ticking against equitable time tolerance.
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Also, all these points are good lessons why to stay tied in well, not with tons of slack so don't impact bod into such discomforts.
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For me added strain from only using 1 D alone or to centers was less than half discomforts of using both D's.