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Sirnick2

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Posts posted by Sirnick2

  1. I couldn't imagine that setup in anything other than up and down climbing. I would hate to see the stress that setup would go through even on a tiny dead wood. That is why the bridge is a textile so it can twist and bend with out putting anything under stress. That is how the zigzag failed, the biner turning and levering the eye under weight. IMO you've turned what is an excellent harness into something that is way less versatile than what it is

  2. I've got heaps to tubular webbing laying around to, so when my leg loops are rooted i'm just gonna stitch up some new ones.

     

    Just any old cord is NOT suitable. I was reading another thread on the topic i think at TreeBuzz and the users of specific different cords were experiencing heavy wear and i recalled either i failure or close to it occurring

  3. Just out of interest, why would you not replace it with the standard Globe 3000? Just to save a couple of bucks? If you get 6 months to a year out of a proper bridge that is money well spent to make sure you aren't going lose any chance of claiming against teufelberger if **** hit the fan and it failed.

  4. I'm spewing, the Uni was my go to tool for SRT but when i was getting less than 10 months out of them financially it wasn't worth while. After trying the Hitch hiker i didn't get along with it to well, i'm happily flying a ZK2. But in my opinion the wear issue should have been addressed within a year of the Uni going to RE.

  5. Ok, tired Ficus's idea but after realising that i had to be able to isolate every limb to set the redirect i went with my original plan.ImageUploadedByTapatalk1367130789.928727.jpg.1f33d77f5f96303af3d0be2318957842.jpg

    This is what i've come up with, 5m of 8mm sirus, a tri lock revolver and a 6mm OV thimble loop. I can chuck it up, hoist my climb line up and tie it off very quickly using a locked off horse knot or something else and to retrieve it, its as easy as just getting back to where it is tied and pulling it out. I'm yet to give it a good run to see what kind of forces i'll be putting on the redirect limb but i'm confident this will suit the purpose well.

    ImageUploadedByTapatalk1367130775.025858.jpg.f0523f498ed5c07b0521838acc30ce0c.jpg

    ImageUploadedByTapatalk1367130751.393529.jpg.ae0681d4ff8d4741df3b2b7cbca9ba0a.jpg

  6. Hi all, I've been toying with this idea over the last week after dead wooding / pruning a large angophora with a huge spread but not a lot of height, I was finding rather than set a redirect (which would have been a pain in the ass to do) I'd save time and just muscle out to where I needed to go. I thought 'if i could just chuck my long lanyard into a high fork above me and use it to hoist my climbing line up, I could tie it off on the limb and effectively I'd have my redirect', just returning to where it's tied off to retrieve it instead of having to go back up to get it like a sling and 'biner redirect.

     

    So what I am thinking is an 8m long bit of 8mm cord with a revolver on one end and a termination on the other along with a mallion with a 5-6mm small prussik. You would climb the tree as normal setting your TIP and when it came time to set a quick redirect chuck one end of the 8mm cord through a high crotch above you, clip your climb line to the revolver (lanyarded in of course) slacken off your climb line, hoist it up to the crotch and tie the other end off or use the mallion with the prussik to lock it off. And hey presto you have your redirect. It might sound like a lot but realistically its not and could save a lot of effort setting up a quick redirect.

     

    I'm gonna knock one up tomorrow and take a few pics to give you guys a better visual.

  7. Buy a rope cleaner and let it soak on luke warm water, followed by a wash in the solution and a wash with plain water. You should be able to tell if there is oil still in rope. I put my ropes in the washing machine all the time, just chain them up and evenly lay them in the tub

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