a modification to the VT hitch and hitch climber pulley with a couple of x-rings to create the X-Tender hitch.
employs a XXR 14x10 and a XXR 20 x14 X-ring with a DMM hitch climber pulley and a spliced eye to eye prussic with two rock exotica oval carabiners. on 11.7 mm samson vortex rope.
The idea was inspired by colemanjessenz use of the DMM pinto rigging pulley spacer at the top of the VT.
by putting a x-ring above the hitch climber pulley but just below the VT it removes the setback space of the VT to create a setback free VT allowing for one handed tending or midline tending to engage the VT with every move. Has been field tested for the last couple of months on samson blue moon, sterling tendril and samson vortex with 10mm beeline prussic eye to eye spliced by ABR.
all my climbing systems have been setup the same style and I personally really enjoy climbing on it.

see what you think.
Ben.
Stihlmadd, AKA Ben ! Really great video, mate! Not trying to derail this thread with my previous posts, just thought I should comment on your original post in this thread.
That hitch and ring combination does look silky smooth. Great camera angles in this video, which I know took a bunch of work to acquire. The shot looking down from above as you dropped down quickly on your hitch/ring combo was really great. That one required you to climb all the way back up in order to retrieve the camera, correct?
The other shot I really liked was the one looking up as you pulled down on the ring, and hearing the whine of the hitch against the rope. I was wondering where you had the camera mounted in order to get such a stable shot; one of those GoPro chest harnesses,with camera mounting plate included, perhaps?
Great music for the soundtrack, too. I just really liked this vid.
Forgive the newbe question I'm about to ask. With regard to doing fast descents on a hitch like you did in this video, do you worry at all about glazing your hitch, or even worse, your climbing line?
I've only been climbing for two years or so, and getting my hitch dialed in so that it will run so freely without binding up on me is a hit and miss thing for me sometimes. When it does run freely but reliably, the tendency is to want to do a fast rappel, to save time, just for fun, and to ease the discomfort of hanging in the saddle.
I was having some success doing fast rappels on my Rope Wrench for awhile, and one day as I started to descend, I found my hitch was slipping. I was climbing on two ropes at the time, so no safety problem. When I got to the ground and examined my 10mm Beeline, I found that it had been glazed during previous days' climbing.
I got to thinking that if the glazing had happened to my rope instead of my hitch cord, I would have been out a lot of money. So the question is, how do you personally govern the speed of your descents in order to prevent damage to rope and hitch cord, if you do it at all.
In a situation where people are making a ton of money, they may just let it rip and consider it a cost of doing business, in exchange for the speed and efficiency of doing fast rappels. I guess I'm hoping that it is somehow possible to both do fast rappels, and avoid the glazing of the rope.
I hope my writing is clear enough. Thanks for posting your video, and thanks for any answer you choose to give about glazing.
Tim