Makes sense in concept. If you bust it out anytime soon a photo would be killer.
Paul’s video of his redirect and my practice the other day gave me a pretty significant revelation I can’t get over. Setting a second line from the ground and a standalone anchor would be rare in my area, but setting a second line higher than my first would at minimum get me better rope angle, at best be able to redirect one of the lines to make a nice wide two rope system.
Anyway, hoping someone could answer one of a few questions before I begin looking around facing the temptation to spend money lol.
Does a delta quick link fit nicely in a rook style swivel pulley?
the camp gyro looks too spread out and weird for me on a bridge. But does the independent nature of the two swivels being able to move around make for nice one handed descents and one handed tending grabbing both ropes often or is it a rarity?
@Muggs or anyone else familiar.
I switched to a swivel pulley recently and the benefits in reduced wear on the rope bridge were quickly apparent. But I guess id give it up if one handed descent and slack tending were more frequent than not.
I’m considering just two swiveled bones and the smallest dmm O’s on the swivel pulley for compactness but it feels like they would be too far apart to ever allow for a nice quick one handed slack tend and descent.
The only thing better than the dopamine from hypothetical gear planning is the high from when it pays off :b