moss
Been here much more than a while
- Location
- Carlisle, Massachusetts, U.S.
Pretty sure Sterling Tendril 11mm is discontinued. Nice line, sorry to see it gone.I bet Tendril would be a good choice.
-AJ
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Pretty sure Sterling Tendril 11mm is discontinued. Nice line, sorry to see it gone.I bet Tendril would be a good choice.
A whole 'nother discussion that's been had before. Over time a bit of shock absorption/bounce is probably going to be better for climber bodies... knees, shoulders, elbows, forearms, wrists etc. Once a bouncy line is loaded a smoother climbing motion reduces actual bounce. I must be jaded or too old or both. These days I don't care if my line bounces or doesn't ;-) Fly is good SRS, and Yale 11.7mm double-braids (more static) are still the best all-round climbing lines out there. I'm now a retro climber, sad isn't it? ;-)Both of those lines bounced like a bungee cord for me when doing SRS (not using the device discussed here). Not my favorites for climbing.
No purely Mechanical device will be good with pitch, but some will be less handicapped than others. A hitch device will always adapt better. Pitch sticks to the metal surfaces and stays.
The one advantage the mechanicals have is the pitch can be washed out on site, for some temporary relief. And if the particularly device can be used in MRS, it will ride over the pitch a little easier as the components are producing less bite.
Those cleats or cams at the top of the Buckingham would be a disaster for Pitch. I can say with almost certainly. The rotating bollard at the bottom will help more than a fixed bollard. Grooves are also terrible with pitch and moisture, but useful for dry clean ropes less than 12mm diam, so should be kept short where possible. Like I said, it's a tough balancing act to achieve and tick all the legal boxes. Frightfully expensive too.
Done. Edited my BlackBird post above to reduce distraction. Onward.That deserves its own thread ! The release in the middle, with friction above, is a very good idea.
Pitch is literally like glue, when sandwiched between a metal and rope surface. And it just doesn't go away on its own.Ahh, a breath of reality.
This idea of a mechanical that handles pitch well is a Holy Grail never to be found unless the friction surfaces have built in pitch heaters. Or a mounted rubbing alcohol tank/disperser above the device? Or both, that way the whole thing will turn into a flame thrower!
Certainly gumming up the actual friction points matters, and makes sense that longer friction surfaces are worse but... it's when a climber hits a pitched section of line that's the show stopper. If the line is sufficiently "pitched" in multiple places nothing will go, no matter what. Call for another line and start cleaning (or replacing) your hitch or mechanical in the tree.
-AJ
I was just generalizing for simplicity, mate. But thanks" but the internal friction between the rope and components is reduced by 1/2"
It's reduced a good bit more than half. If your Mrs. Ddirttip was a pulley the tension ratio between the rope legs would be 1.2 due to losses going around the pulley and the tension ratio goes higher 1.4 IIRC for rope over a branch. Lots of braking contribution from the tip.
No generalizing with @Bart_ ;-)I was just generalizing for simplicity, mate. But thanks
If I understand correctly... good point about the Scarab or a rack. The friction surface is only on one side of the line wherever it's contacting the "device". No pinching between opposite friction surfaces and a pitchy line has a chance to fight its way through the device.All kidding about scotch aside, I have used a scarab now a couple of times on rigging out bits and pieces on less than sap free rigging rope and haven't yet had jogs in the lowering/ friction. Use of a rap rack in my old days on gritted up rope (glacier and caving) didn't give me the impression of jogs and jerky behaviour so much (at least as far as I can remember). Hence the comment about a bendy rope path maybe being less susceptible to junk on the rope textile surface maybe?
Great idea Tom about ceramic or other space age stuff for a friction cam. Of if it's the friction cam giving jerkyness, what about a swappable cam/ friction bit that you could just stop and swap out in-tree, mid way thru a job. I have carried spare prussiks and have swapped out the first one in-tree when it got gooey.
Also thought about a test tube cleaner style brush to get in between the rope and the friction plate/ cam if you unweighted it, but that would require carrying solvent in-tree (as above). But maybe if it was in a tube type vial with the brush inside in a cap (like an capped aluminum cigar tube or something).
And I would bet that some folks would find differences with some mechanicals depending on how they manipulate the device with their hand - i.e a RRP using just the bird v.s. the bird and a hand on the top crook or bend.
Hence my comment about the mfgrs giving instruction on all use cases when they introduce a new thing. Reg I think you did a great job with the two videos on your throwing hook showing it in use, as an example. Same with the Captain and DMM's Kinisi as they rolled it out.
Just my two cents tho. Cheers all.
Not that I've heard Tom.@Reg
Do you know if anyone has done research using a ceramic hybrid for the wear points
Look how ceramics are used in car racing, aircraft and other industrial uses