eyehearttrees
Not a new Member
- Location
- Tampa-Area
#1, using climb-lines as rigging lines:
I've got an idea that, as time goes by for me in this industry, that every time I retire a climb-line that I can simply make it into a rigging-line, obviously the strength would only allow light & light-medium drops as my 11.7mm double-braid/24-braid Blue Moon with a 6,500 lbs ABS should make a fine line for light&medium duty rigging (and is probably a great textile-match, in terms of its tight cover-braid, 1/2" diameter and 6500lbs MSB) so am planning to swap from Blue Moon to Adrenaline (would LOVE thoughts on this switch!!) right now while the Blue Moon is still in 90% like-new condition, "A-/B+ condition", so if I ordered Drenaline today I could have the Blue moon as my medium-diuty rigging line (one hesitation I have is that it's an incredibly static line, Blue Moon's elasticity is a tight 1.4% so will certainly say it's fine for lower-force rigging (IE it the Blue Moon becomes a bull-line that i use with my Safeloc [2,700lbs SWL] since if I used, say, 5/8" Polydyne (~20k lbs SWL, same strength) that you're going to shock-load, is really too-mudh for the Safebloc (at least in nromal-configuratitons, I've got the Bloc here but haven't chosen what type of cordage I want to try as I only have a 3/8" (~65' long) and 1/2" (100.0' long) bull-lines on-hand right now but they're generic rope not Yale/Samson/etc (actually they're $10 at Haror Freight and $15 at Home Depot, it's always a game to try and figure-out just which "over-the-counter", non-arborist-intended gear that's available, for instance I'd gotten my Safebloc w/o a sling for it, and a harbor freight lanyard/sling I had already had (use it for a buck-strap / flipline most-often, I much-prefer flat webbing in that instance over cordage!), thankfully the Safebloc just happened to fit in the sling's eyesperfectly!! But whether it's those 2" flat nylon, 6' long webbing slings for $10 (6' long, 2" double-ply sling) or their ~$5, (4)-pack of 800lbs SWL 1" slings(they're great for branch-slings when working in the lower-weight-range as the Safeloc recommnends (I know the block's 5:1 SWL is 2,700lbs, though a 2700lbs load would tear-though my current lines, at any rate whether it's new or old lines the reality is that unless I put another termination-end on the Safebloc sling I'll forever just have 1 leg in-use of that 3/4" tenex TEC which is, IMO, ridiculously wasteful (these are ~20k lbs MBS slings, cutting that in-half by using single-leg configurationsn is just silly imo so my current approach is to get one of those ~10', 3/4 Tenex slings (20k ABS) that has (1) rigging-ring on one end, and **the Safeloc" on that rope becomes one-of-two terminations/ends which not only allows that great bend-radius for your bull-line but also that's also getting fixed control from the friction of the rings & Safebloc as-opposed-to the ridiculously tight bending of line + zero friction that's inhernet to blocks (think DMM's top-offering is a mere 3" wide which, for up to 3/4" rope-diameter usage , just has me shaking my head thinking what horrible bend-radius that is on the bull-line (and what horrible bend-radius the block's sling's attachment point is, even tighter than the bull-line's bollard/pulley, these tight bend-radius' are just horrible to your rope and whter it's rope-longevity or groundsman control of the load the ringed-devices are where it's at!!
Thanks for any thoughts on this, am mostly curious about:
- whether my very-static Blue Moon can be used this way w/o any issues I'm missing, and
- whether Drenaline is a good climbing-rope, I mean I love my blue moon in fact it's crossed my mind to simply order the same - it's not broken don't fix it - howver I want a slightly skinnier, and lighter line if/when the time comes, what worries me the most is that Drenaline is kernmantle and I"m new so Blue Moon (double-braid) was my 1st & only climb-line so far (just got it half a year go) so am genuinely thinking to just order a new Blue Moon for climb-line and make the old one my medium-duty rigging line (my current rigging lines are light-->medium, honestly I'm surprised I haven't broken hem yet, will be nice to have a genuine Medium-Duty cord for use-cases in-between using the 1/2" Blue Moon on the light stuff to medium stufff, and 5/8" (polydyne I think, it's 5/8" offering is as-strong as Stable Braids's 3/4" ABS!! Plus, 3% strech sounds ideal fhe thing's use-cases)
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Got a Q on *Controlled-Speedine* setup, I don't know how I went so long w/o learning about this as a general concept (probalby because I never had any pieces heavy enough to matter, but that'll change very very soon!!), at any rate in watching all the X-slings & Safebloc slings videos out there I found this 'Controlled Speedline' technique where you're using BOTH a speedline to control direction, **as well as** a rigging-line to control speed/travel of the piece along the speedline!
Looks AMAZING, however the force-vectors involved are just beyond my understanding....when I set something up this, and launch it down the speedline at a reduced-speed since it's ALSO connected to a rigging-line that's going through the Safeblock (they showed this in David Driver's X video), how do I calculate max-loads? For instance, is using 2 lines in this configuration, ie not straight/steep speedlines but traditional, 45deg speedlines, significantly stronger? I guess I'm watching these and seeing gigantic pieces being launched BUT I'm uncertain whether the two lines are allowing more weight than either could've alone in that orientation, OR if it's simply a speedline lets you aim a rigged-piece, but you've still gotta respect your rigging-setup's final SWL's in-place despite having 2 ropes supporting this operation instead of the typical 1 rope from plain-rigging or plain-speedlining, or does the speedline rope do 100% of the support of the load, while the rigging-line is SOLELY to control speed-along-the-line?
Regardless of the answer to ^ that last one, am SOO psyched for this doubled/'controlled' approach to speedlines, makes so much sense (and we have "crabgrass turf" here in FL so slamming branches on good turf gets you a lot of upset customers (don't matter if you can explain it'll cost a couple hundred more for me to avoid it by rigging every.last.bit >20lbs, and how I'm wasting the time up here (that he's paying me for!) when I could've just let them slam and saved time & he could've had those extra wages go right-towards some sod-tiles or sod-plugs!!)
I've got an idea that, as time goes by for me in this industry, that every time I retire a climb-line that I can simply make it into a rigging-line, obviously the strength would only allow light & light-medium drops as my 11.7mm double-braid/24-braid Blue Moon with a 6,500 lbs ABS should make a fine line for light&medium duty rigging (and is probably a great textile-match, in terms of its tight cover-braid, 1/2" diameter and 6500lbs MSB) so am planning to swap from Blue Moon to Adrenaline (would LOVE thoughts on this switch!!) right now while the Blue Moon is still in 90% like-new condition, "A-/B+ condition", so if I ordered Drenaline today I could have the Blue moon as my medium-diuty rigging line (one hesitation I have is that it's an incredibly static line, Blue Moon's elasticity is a tight 1.4% so will certainly say it's fine for lower-force rigging (IE it the Blue Moon becomes a bull-line that i use with my Safeloc [2,700lbs SWL] since if I used, say, 5/8" Polydyne (~20k lbs SWL, same strength) that you're going to shock-load, is really too-mudh for the Safebloc (at least in nromal-configuratitons, I've got the Bloc here but haven't chosen what type of cordage I want to try as I only have a 3/8" (~65' long) and 1/2" (100.0' long) bull-lines on-hand right now but they're generic rope not Yale/Samson/etc (actually they're $10 at Haror Freight and $15 at Home Depot, it's always a game to try and figure-out just which "over-the-counter", non-arborist-intended gear that's available, for instance I'd gotten my Safebloc w/o a sling for it, and a harbor freight lanyard/sling I had already had (use it for a buck-strap / flipline most-often, I much-prefer flat webbing in that instance over cordage!), thankfully the Safebloc just happened to fit in the sling's eyesperfectly!! But whether it's those 2" flat nylon, 6' long webbing slings for $10 (6' long, 2" double-ply sling) or their ~$5, (4)-pack of 800lbs SWL 1" slings(they're great for branch-slings when working in the lower-weight-range as the Safeloc recommnends (I know the block's 5:1 SWL is 2,700lbs, though a 2700lbs load would tear-though my current lines, at any rate whether it's new or old lines the reality is that unless I put another termination-end on the Safebloc sling I'll forever just have 1 leg in-use of that 3/4" tenex TEC which is, IMO, ridiculously wasteful (these are ~20k lbs MBS slings, cutting that in-half by using single-leg configurationsn is just silly imo so my current approach is to get one of those ~10', 3/4 Tenex slings (20k ABS) that has (1) rigging-ring on one end, and **the Safeloc" on that rope becomes one-of-two terminations/ends which not only allows that great bend-radius for your bull-line but also that's also getting fixed control from the friction of the rings & Safebloc as-opposed-to the ridiculously tight bending of line + zero friction that's inhernet to blocks (think DMM's top-offering is a mere 3" wide which, for up to 3/4" rope-diameter usage , just has me shaking my head thinking what horrible bend-radius that is on the bull-line (and what horrible bend-radius the block's sling's attachment point is, even tighter than the bull-line's bollard/pulley, these tight bend-radius' are just horrible to your rope and whter it's rope-longevity or groundsman control of the load the ringed-devices are where it's at!!
Thanks for any thoughts on this, am mostly curious about:
- whether my very-static Blue Moon can be used this way w/o any issues I'm missing, and
- whether Drenaline is a good climbing-rope, I mean I love my blue moon in fact it's crossed my mind to simply order the same - it's not broken don't fix it - howver I want a slightly skinnier, and lighter line if/when the time comes, what worries me the most is that Drenaline is kernmantle and I"m new so Blue Moon (double-braid) was my 1st & only climb-line so far (just got it half a year go) so am genuinely thinking to just order a new Blue Moon for climb-line and make the old one my medium-duty rigging line (my current rigging lines are light-->medium, honestly I'm surprised I haven't broken hem yet, will be nice to have a genuine Medium-Duty cord for use-cases in-between using the 1/2" Blue Moon on the light stuff to medium stufff, and 5/8" (polydyne I think, it's 5/8" offering is as-strong as Stable Braids's 3/4" ABS!! Plus, 3% strech sounds ideal fhe thing's use-cases)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Got a Q on *Controlled-Speedine* setup, I don't know how I went so long w/o learning about this as a general concept (probalby because I never had any pieces heavy enough to matter, but that'll change very very soon!!), at any rate in watching all the X-slings & Safebloc slings videos out there I found this 'Controlled Speedline' technique where you're using BOTH a speedline to control direction, **as well as** a rigging-line to control speed/travel of the piece along the speedline!
Looks AMAZING, however the force-vectors involved are just beyond my understanding....when I set something up this, and launch it down the speedline at a reduced-speed since it's ALSO connected to a rigging-line that's going through the Safeblock (they showed this in David Driver's X video), how do I calculate max-loads? For instance, is using 2 lines in this configuration, ie not straight/steep speedlines but traditional, 45deg speedlines, significantly stronger? I guess I'm watching these and seeing gigantic pieces being launched BUT I'm uncertain whether the two lines are allowing more weight than either could've alone in that orientation, OR if it's simply a speedline lets you aim a rigged-piece, but you've still gotta respect your rigging-setup's final SWL's in-place despite having 2 ropes supporting this operation instead of the typical 1 rope from plain-rigging or plain-speedlining, or does the speedline rope do 100% of the support of the load, while the rigging-line is SOLELY to control speed-along-the-line?
Regardless of the answer to ^ that last one, am SOO psyched for this doubled/'controlled' approach to speedlines, makes so much sense (and we have "crabgrass turf" here in FL so slamming branches on good turf gets you a lot of upset customers (don't matter if you can explain it'll cost a couple hundred more for me to avoid it by rigging every.last.bit >20lbs, and how I'm wasting the time up here (that he's paying me for!) when I could've just let them slam and saved time & he could've had those extra wages go right-towards some sod-tiles or sod-plugs!!)











