Zebco Kid
Branched out member
- Location
- Ashland, Oregon
Hello All,
I watched a video where the presenter deployed a Munter Hitch on one end of his long lanyard so he could position himself further from a tie in point. The presenter wrapped one end of the lanyard around a limb, then connected the carabiner with a Munter hitch on the standing part of the rope. He stated that this allowed for proper loading of the carabiner (avoiding cross-loading).
I'm curious whether this is a good use of the Munter Hitch. In all other tutorials that I've seen, I see it being used for rapelling (moving rope), and not static.
I guess the real underlying question is, would you use this as a life safety configuration if the other end was an appropriate hitch/pulley setup connected to your harness.
As I write this, I also realize that it creates an SRT situation without a rope wrench or other device to reduce the load on the hitch.
I hope that makes sense. If not...here is the video that provided the idea.
Thank you for your thoughts.
I watched a video where the presenter deployed a Munter Hitch on one end of his long lanyard so he could position himself further from a tie in point. The presenter wrapped one end of the lanyard around a limb, then connected the carabiner with a Munter hitch on the standing part of the rope. He stated that this allowed for proper loading of the carabiner (avoiding cross-loading).
I'm curious whether this is a good use of the Munter Hitch. In all other tutorials that I've seen, I see it being used for rapelling (moving rope), and not static.
I guess the real underlying question is, would you use this as a life safety configuration if the other end was an appropriate hitch/pulley setup connected to your harness.
As I write this, I also realize that it creates an SRT situation without a rope wrench or other device to reduce the load on the hitch.
I hope that makes sense. If not...here is the video that provided the idea.
Thank you for your thoughts.
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