Petzl said to NEVER do this
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- Опубліковано 25 гру 2024
- Don't fall on teeth, because I did it for you. Toothed devices are intended to be progress captures up a climbing rope or in a complex pulley system. If you get a high enough force, it can desheath your rope and possibly cut through it. Petzl says that happens at 4kN and we did some human testing to find out if that is true.
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Sylvester Jakubowski donated new traxion's for testing / p90puma
Jeremiah LeTourneau filmed our human experiment / wallstreakjourney
Petzl's Belay Warning shorturl.at/CETZ3
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Petzl said Never do this
01:35 Falling for Science
02:12 Fall Factors
03:06 Above 4KN
05:34 Understand WHERE the risk is
08:02 Short Falls at 3kN
08:35 Drop Tower Tests
11:37 Slow Pull Tests
14:19 Buying Guide
We tested teeth on ropes with UNICORE ua-cam.com/video/jXb-L3iqvfM/v-deo.html
Check out our new store! hownot2.store/
3:17 "Too much teeth isn't fun y'know?"
Undarrated moment
Love your statement “please don’t do this at home. Because I did it for you”.
As a firefighter in rural America we don’t us ropes much but it is a tool we sometimes have to have. I have learned so much from your channel in the last couple of months watching your videos.
Keep up the hard falls. Safely! And the hard work.
I always get annoyed with "we're professionals, don't try this at home" but something hits different about "please don't try human testing at home, because I already did it for you" 😂
1 meter and 6 inches has to be the world's worst metric system
I've got heaps of respect for Petzl creating documentation about off testing use of their devices. It kind of reminds me of harm reduction for recreational drugs, where you decriminalise drugs and even offer free clean needles and advice on how not to OD and take care of your friends. Looking at how your devices are actually used is just a better way to deal with things if you actually care about people.
Raed take notes...
@@MrTheomossop by who ? There's a lot of books called take notes .
@@alanomofo Raed slacklines. They don't publish any of their data and testing, they just drop a call out video every couple months talking about how much data and testing they have done.
as someone who was addicted to heroin from 16-27, harm reduction is just officially regulated harm. I know all the "data" says otherwise, but every single addict I knew abused the system to get free shit. Humans are messy and unpredictable.. Petzl being honest and actually confident in their product isn't the same as narcotic harm reduction programs handing out free syringes and spoons
@@MrTheomossop talk is cheap, if you haven't seen the documentation the testing is irrelevant. "it's good bro we tested tf out of it.. trust me bro. data? what's data bro?"
Thanks!
Love that you post in meters/SI units, makes its so much easier to understand for everyone outside of Usa!
The "head conversion" is also a lot easier with meter, fallfactor and kN
'one metre, six inches of slack' 🤯 I'm going to start throwing these sort of Frankenstein units into conversation
how'd that pan out for you?
@@snared_ As hard as I've tried to use it for torque specifications, I don't think that the Newton-Furlong will catch on
@@mordecaiiacedro6543😂
Hi Ryan. Always a pleasure watching your stuff guys, included those gnarly falls on a microtrax... good on ya!! just to share some infos, that 4 kN you are mentioning comes from one of EN 567's requirements. This regulation is dedicated for ascenders or rope grabs (chest/hand ascenders). The pulleys on the other hand they fall within the scope of the EN 12278 but it specific for pulleys. Pulleys, as seen from this standard don't consider the fact that a load may be stopped or grabbed by the pulley itself or a mechanism of the pulley. That's why it's common practice to build more complicate devices such as a microtrax or protrax by meshing the requirements of multiple standards. For EN 567, manufacturers are obliged to build devices that perform 5 repeated locking tests on the same rope strand reaching a peak force of 4.0 kN feeding a bit of rope through the device after each test. There you go, here is your 4 kN magic! Cheers
Awesome video Ryan and a great edit. I love the pace and the amount of information you cramped in there while keeping it entertaining👍👍
This channel deserves soooooo many more subs.
Thanks for providing so much useful information for rope and gear users
Thanks! Your videos are always super good enough.
Creepy but great timing! 1hr before you posted this I was trying to look up tope rope solo fall numbers on the micro traction.
Thanks!
Díky!
I avoid using micro traxion for top roping or as a backup because it can be locked open. It is possible it gets rubbed/pushed by you or gear when climbing and it locks open.
I tend to like non-toothed devices and something toothed only as a backup when needed and I select a device that cannot be locked open. Toothed devices make great backup devices if you use something like a fall arrest devices that does not work when falling head first. A toothed device is invariant to pulling direction and makes a good backup for setups like that.
As a big microtraxion fan, I really enjoyed this video. But I expected it to break higher. Usually the safety ratings give a larger margin of error. Those forces are unnervingly close to a real use case (for example, climbing above a TR solo anchor to clean it). Good stuff to keep in mind.
I believe that "ventricular tachycardia" directly contributes uncontrolled sphincter spasm.
The channel is awesome. I've been playing the climbing game for at least a couple of decades and wish that this kind of info was available when I was... well, more of a gumby than I am now.
BOOTY BOOTY BOOTY! That cam was my longest project to date, an unusable yellow Rock Empire (~.75, single axle) with a lobe that had spun past the fully-retracted position. It was interesting watching the whips in between my frustrated prying, tugging, and funking. No booty left behind.
I did my own human testing on a microtrax a while back: ff1, a few feet, freefall from a beefy wood beam anchor, aggressive kip into tensed ball position, 150lbs, moderately used rope, repeated on the same spot on the rope... On 2 trials, it took me three repeats to get a core shot, I didn't test to sheath failure. I found it super good enough for TR solo'ing.
Also, I suspect that if they weren't called teeth, maybe "comb" or "fids", people wouldn't hyperventilate so much.
I don't think the terminology is why people are skeptical, I think it's just the fact that the method of operation is that there are spikes that stab into your sheath. I mean, theoretically the spikes stab between the threads and shouldn't damage it under normal usage, but still.
That being said, I do TR solo with a micro trax, and it has been fine for me.
It occurs to me that one reason the 200lb weight is more effective at making the rope fail is the inherent flexibility in the human body and the lack of it in the weight during the catch part of the fall.
We use the microtraxions a lot for simulclimbing big routes (>800m) never really use it for belaying seconds: enough gear in between and traxions on intermediate belays. Placing a extra piece of gear immediately after the belay to avoid lead falling (directly) on it, or in that case, at all. It's the seconds job to keep rope right, for which a grigri on the harness (or belayplate in guide mode) is very usefull to compendate for different climbing speeds in different sections (and first leading, placing gear and reading route). Works like a charm, but needs very good communication (microtrax on and off) and needs an attentive seconds. For first, doesn't change much to normal leading. Big fan! When I stop when out of gear, just belay on the plate.
Some dude off in the distance with binoculars thinks he's witnessing the worst climber of all time
Slight correction on super minor points. The EN standard for semi static ropes (EN1891) requires the information ribbon to be through the rope, with the info repeated every 1000mm. And the Micro Traction is back for 2023, and it's pretty sweet!
again i love the buying guides. it's super helpful to see the differences between the three similar products.
Hmm. Another equally common "improper (?)" usage of these guys is to place it on a piece of protection while simul-climbing, so if the second fell, it wouldn't rip the leader. I'd have to imagine that second falls in this scenario could generate forces roughly equivalent to your human testing section (3:00-5:30). Definitely makes me question that application more, seeing the fall forces you recorded there.
I TRS with an ascender and a microtrax pretty often. This helped a lot in learning the forces necessary to desheath. I feel pretty confident that as long as you keep slack out of the system with a chest harness (to keep the ascender pointed up so rope gets pulled through as you climb) it should be super good enough. But you really have to keep slack out which I don’t do as well for my backup (the microtrax); makes me wonder if there is a better way to manage slack there, since what is the point of a backup if it doesn’t effectively back up.
weight the rope so it pulls through on it's own. A full 1L Nalgene cloved in close to the ground is usually enough.
This one was a bit surprising to me! Some questions that came to mind while I was watching it: 1. how does a device like the Climbing Technology Rollnlock compare? (I got one of these instead of a micro traxion because the tooth design is much less aggressive) 2. How does the rope sheath thickness affect the result? (i.e. ropes of the same diameter with different sheath %) 3. Does beal's unicore change the outcome? (i.e. if you de-sheath the rope on the drop town, does the unicore keep the test weight from decking any better than a normal rope)
Maybe I should send you my chopped Beal Operas...
+1 wanting to know how RollNLock compares
I'm curious about what the results would be if you tried these same tests with a unicore rope, or are the ropes you used in the video unicore? Either way, great video, I always love getting more insight into the gear I'm using.
I'd like to make a video focusing on a unicore rope since it's pretty neat and compare it to other ropes doing all sorts of tests including desheathing.
I read this as unicorn rope and was very confused. I was very interested in finding out about this rope named after a majestic magic beast.
This was great Ryan, excellent information presented in a very engaging way. I do also like the scenery, that was index? I think your tight edit is almost to fast on this one though, a couple of times I had to pause it and search to read the numbers because they were on the screen for such a brief period and I was watching the image.
Thanks for feedback. When I get above 12 samples in one video, I feel like I could easily lose the audience if i snap to many for too long. If it feels too fast, I recommend to just sit back and enjoy the jist of it and look at the tables in the blog afterwards. I typically try to put them in the edit so you can just pause it but this one I couldn't.
@@HowNOT2 Totally agree, pausing is sufficient, blog handles proper reading, I appreciate not holding too long on data as everyone's reading speed is different and you'll never get it perfect.
@@HowNOT2 As a non-native speaker I'm on the fence. I have to really focus on the tightly edited videos, but I totally get why it's edited that way. Anyhow thanks a lot for the great content Ryan. I've seen the Micro Traxion used as a top rope belay by guides, but never used it myself. Great to have that knowedge all in one place/video even if I'm not using it currently. The more you know the more versitale you are when you have to solve a situation.
@@HowNOT2 I am surely in among the nerdiest 1% of your viewers. I do really like the blogs.
Incredible and very insightful video! I would love to see how the micro traxion compares with the new tiblock (which has a spring in it) THe Tiblock is currently debatably at the forefront of simulclimbing, because they create even less drag. Additionally, some say that it puts less force on the rope since the teeth are not on a hinge that (maybe) exponentially applies more force under the teeth! This is all speculation and things I have heard so I would love to hear a clear answer!!
Super great video, i would love to see a comparison with some rope clamps like the Ropeman and the Roll n Lock
+1
Thanks Ryan! I will share this video often I believe. So many people think teeth will destroy their ropes on TRS. Myth busted! (Not that you should do a factor 1+ fall on it!!)
I'm excited to do TRS videos with you so I learn the proper ways of doing this. I could just take your course but hey, I'd rather you just come to my lab for a week :). Or we could solo a big wall... together haha
@@HowNOT2 "solo a big wall together" outrageous!!! Side by side but I am forbidden to physically help you. I just give you the beta!!
I would solo the pitch, and then clean it while you chil in your portaledge. When I'm done you can ascend my rope :)
Used petzl ascender & 10'5mm climbing rope for top rope soloing many times. I think it's safe. Wouldn't use any ascender or mini ascender for belaying.
Thank u for the video. Very interesting. I like to see someone testing reality. I like to know when the ropes are gonna break and how. You do a very serious work here.
For me one of the bottom lines of this video has been: Never, never, never, hang yourself on a rope thinner than 9mm. Those 6mm ripping at 3KN were scary.
Seems like petzl was being cautious at 4 but wow I’d rather not fall on it at all.
I try to avoid 4kn because it hurts me! Haha
Better safe than sorry. If the rope breaks at a bit over 5 it is probably wise to write 4 on the warning
The 4 kN are what is required for the EN567 standard for ascenders, that's why they test up to that number.
Honestly, most devices will tell you a lower number than the actual weight they can take, not just in climbing, but for almost everything. (This is not encouragement to test anything to its absolute limit. The number they put on the package is their estimate for the lowest force that can do damage, being it desheathing a rope, like in this example, or a table collapsing under the weight it's holding.)
@@beardiemom it's like straps for loads for lifting things.. say they are rated at 10 000 lbs..usually can hold 20 000 lbs..that said it's thousand percent safe at 10 000 ..at 20 000 it's a crap shoot ..so they target down low for safe number to leave themselves room
I use this as a backup on top-rope solos, and the way I circumvent the fear of tearing the line is I have my main device (grigri) on a second strand. I use backup knots in my grigri line and run the nanotrax below it so that way I’m never falling far even if the grigri slips, and if the nano did rip the rope the backup knots would still jam in the grigri and prevent me from hitting the ground
I saw a guy do this at a crag in crowders mountain NC, and it doesnt seem like the best system in my opinion. I'm a big fan using 2 spocs on a single rope because of how easy the rope feeds through, being able to climb routes longer than half of my rope length, and knowing I'm only putting maybe 1kn on my rope after a fall as compared to having to yank slack out of your grigri after every move
The bottom guy is one of my best friends Bobby. He's developing techniques to get stuck gear out of the rock. I love that man.
This is one of the best videos recently. Love the human testing haha, but don't worry, I also like the videos where you don't need to risk your sanity.
Also the lighting in the new studio space is fantastic! Prime
Hi Ryan,
When using a tube device in guide mode thinner ropes can squeeze past each other, so that the brake strand is not underneath the load strand any more but both strands squeezed side by side. This leaves the rope very hard to operate manually, but still slipping trough below bodyweight in both directions. This effect is of course dependant of device and rope.
I would love to see a comparison of this videos results and the results of a similar case-study for guide-tube-devices.
Thanks for reading to the end! I still absolutely love your content =)=)=)=)
Another big benefit to the protraxion is the ability to load it while it's clipped to the anchor.
Love to see this test with the CT Rollin Lock. No teeth but I've heard people say it will strip the sheath at potentially lower forces. Not sure if they are right or why that would be.
I find that hard to believe, I've seen a lot of (static) testing using the Roll'n'lock as a bridge adjuster on arborist harnesses. If I remember correctly, the rope pretty much always started slipping through, and broke at the stopper knot, with similar numbers as just the stopper knot would produce. Now, of course this is a static pull test, and using exclusively static ropes. Still very interesting results. I will post some links to those tests in a following comment.
ua-cam.com/video/82vzebgHOHY/v-deo.html
My memory was partly correct, most of the time the side with the knot broke before that side with the roll'n'lock, but it did desheath the rope. That did not cause the rope to fail, that could be because of the stopper knot though. The rope that slipped through looks to be a non-core-dependent rope, all the kernmantel ropes did see desheathing, however that was at relatively high forces.
ua-cam.com/video/K3eOlN5pGmI/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/jv_ktS_8SnI/v-deo.html
@raphael beinhauer thanks for that, but not sure about that test. A slow pull isn't the same as falling on it. If the rope does slip at high speed then I think it could be more of a problem. There are no teeth but it isn't a smooth surface either
¡Gracias!
Thanks for whipping for the greater good
Fantastic episode thank you! I use the micro as a back up device for my rope solo rig.
Would you be willing to test the duck or the roll’n lock?
one of the best videos in a while, to my bias.
i would LOVE to see a similar test with the RollNLock and Camp Lift, as these are favorites of mine that have no teeth
What's interesting to me isn't so much the de-sheathing but after. If I fall on an ascender and de-sheath a section of rope, do I have any chance of second chance if there's more rope under me, to hang my bodyweight on remaining strings of sheath (fouling my underwear) or am I guaranteed to be going-down fast. Your drop test was at the end of the rope so the sheath could just come off the end
Seems like it depends on what gear you've got on you and what you're climbing. I'd say your best bet is to set up an emergency anchor right where you stopped and then wait for a rescue. Or if you have enough good rope below you then maybe you can rap down off your emergency anchor.
I would be reluctant to move much more than that, because any abrasion of the rockface on the core is going to become bad news, fast.
Omg thank you Ryan, I've been waiting for this.
Awesome Ryan! Thank you!
This is soooooooooo satisfying when you slowly cut ropes with cissors. Thank you so much for this.
This is so thorough and informative! Thanks Ryan
I would love to see how Unicore ropes behaves with that test protocol. Thanks for those videos
Do you know why the EN standard for maximum allowed impact force in a fall arrest system is 6 KN? That's the force it takes to herniate a disk.I LOVE your channel, so Don't do repeated factor 1, eventualy you will F&^% up your back... also, how long did you let the rope rest between drops?
I may be watching on UA-cam and removed from the situation, but I still don’t get warm fuzzies. Thank you Ryan for doing this so I don’t have to!
Great video, Ryan! Thanks! Would be cool to see how Beal Unicore ropes do in similar tests!
i’d watch grigri as a top rope solo self belay device test video👀!!
did it once and did not fall but questioned the validity of the system (both with rope weighed down so the rope moves smoothly and one where you have to pull up slack as you climb)
as someone interested in toproping and treeclimbing this is particularly interesting and relevant for me!
kinda wished you tried a unicore rope like beal's and see how it changes the desheathing force required
Have you ever done any videos on the small damage the teeth do over time? I have that petzl hand ascender and a petzl knee ascender and another boot ascender. Both petzls have teeth but the boot ascender has ribs on the cam. I've noticed the rope getting caught on the teeth a few times.
Love your stuff Ryan! Thank you for all your efforts. I’m interested to see how a Unicore rope compares to a standard rope.
Well done on your MBS sheath tests!!
I just bought a 9.2mm Petzl volta rope, and just fiddling with the camming of the microtraxion while slack pulled in and unweighting the rope, the teeth still really damaged the sheath fibers. It seems to only happen when disengaging the teeth by pulling them back to allow the rope to move in other direction in order to give some slack but still kinda catch the sheath. This is an unlikely thing you would need to do on a real climb, but it barely took any force at all to chew up the rope. Learn from my mistake and don’t fiddle with the camming mechanism especially if the weave of the sheath isn’t very taught like my 9.2mm. The teeth pull whole chunks of fibers out way too easily. Super disappointed.
Hey Ryan I've heard a static should be used for TRS but your results make it sound like static and dynamic ropes desheath near the same force. Is a dynamic for TRS good enough or are there other reasons a static should be used? Thanks for the great vid.
As an aborist I think it would be so beneficial if you were to break test and real world in a tree human weight drop test some work positioning devices. Like the rope runner pro, the akimbo, and the petzl zig zag
I swing around trees with them but always refrain from shock loading them (factor 1 or 2 fall)
I'm super curious to see how far i could fall on them before safety really becomes a concern. Like does the device fail before the rope, how does it fail, what impacts does it cause. Lile does it slow you down to the ground or does it become a free fall.
Also curious to see what different tree species braches can hold and at different thicknesses. Also like how far our of a limb is safe to anchor or redirect from. Always try to stay on the trunk but just curious.
I would and I know my company would pay money for content like that. It's really hard to get new guys to trust their gear and trust the trees (hell I dont trust the stuff half the time). I had a lot of fear and doubt in the beginning of my career but now I just trust things on experience because I havent dies yet. I've never actually seen concrete evidence that these things actually work 😂
Dude I am learning so much about climbing gear. thank you.
People are also using Ti-Blocks during Simu climging after hard sections so the second person would not pull down the leader in case of a fall. Would you expect similar numbers with a Ti-Block?
Hi, have you heard of harmonic induced gate flutter in the top quickdraw in a factor 2 fall? I know Petzl did some research and video of this pre internet but I cant find any info online.
What happens is during the fall the rope as is drawn through the top draw and effect like a standing or pressure wave causes the rope to move throug the draw in very umprobably ways while some harmonic effect causes the non locking gate to flutter significantly.
You would need to contrive a factor 2 or greater fall, higher the better so there is a lot of rope below to run out allowing time for harmonics to form.
Interesting. Could be interesting to try and simulate that. We have seen video of gate flutter leading to failure, impact is what we assumed caused gate flutter. Send us an email if you find any articles on it.
I would be interested to see a video seeing how uni-core rope handles desheathing situations like this!
so glad you made this video. I've gotten into a lot of instagram comment battles about this device. Before watching the video, I'm still not going to use it even if your rope doesn't fail. A cam is just better for your rope.
Loved the ventricular tachycardia joke at 11:56 lol, I thought the same thing
Falling on a fixed line even dynamic sounds unpleasant. Thanks for doing it!
Would be really interested to see the pull tests on different 6mm cord, like RAD line, Mammut Glacier cord and BD 6.0 Static. Especially how well 'non-rated' 6mm cords compare to one sold for twice the price in a fancy stuff sack.
Love to see the same test with Unicore rope (opera) and with climbing technologique Rolling Block...
Thanks a lot very interesting
Is this somewhere out of Darrington? I know you were up at Prusik in the Enchantments at some point, do you guys live around here?
Love this video - I use an Edelrid Spoc - it’s good to know I’m going to get at least 4KN before bad things happen. Thanks.
Looooove HowNot2, Ryan and the crew. Quality everytime!! If a manufacturer sponsored this channel, in my opinion, it would be a positive branding strategy. Though it would need to be unbiased and unconstrained I would trust the manufacturer even more if they supplied the gear.
Comming from a climber who does marketing for a living. Just a comment. Peace!
Can you test pro devices? Like pro traxion and ID?
@HowNOT2 Have you tested whether a device which clamps rather than bites (like a Roll N Lock) withstands bigger whips before snapping rope? Super keen to know which device is safer for simuling, even if simuling is inherently sketchy.
would love some testing with cell tower climbing gear, a petzl grillon positioning lanyard test would be amazing!
THANKS for all the amazing content. Have you compared these tooth devices to a stepped ladder device like the Roll N Lock by Climbing Technology? I use the Roll N Lock for simul climbing and haven't fallen on it but I use it as the ladders are purportedly gentler on the rope than teeth. Thanks again guys!!!
Absolutely INSANE! and I LOVE IT!
Would love to see similar tests with the Roll n lock it’s a bit less teethy
CONGRATULATIONS!!
I wish it was better understood how these ascenders work. The teeth are there to engage the cam. The teeth are not what hold you, it's the pinching force of the cam.
There have been ascenders made that did not have teeth, like that Ushba titanium one. They are not safer. To have enough friction to not engage the cam without slipping they need a tighter camming angle, which increases the pinching force. After some ropes were cut by those Ushba ascenders, people stopped climbing on them. That's kind of old history at this point.
Teeth ensure that the rope can't slip, so the camming angle doesn't have to be super tight. They are a good thing.
Your vids are getting way better.
There is a difference between technical experience, and being able to climb 5.12. a 5.12 climber won't consider themselves a beginner. When you say "beginner" climber, you are referring to technical experience. trad experience, hauling experience, ascending, complex rope systems etc. not what grade you can climb
if addition to the reasons you mentioned and pretzl mentions. there are multiple important reasons why beginner/intermediate technical experience climbers should not use: 1. cannot give slack if loaded, (when giving slack unloaded, 2nd is more exposed) 2. cannot lower a second 3. cam can get stuck on rock or other shit and wont work at all. 4. traverses
here is a good criteria to determine if you are experienced enough to use it: 1. you know how to escape a belay and put your second on a belay device to lower. 2. you can improvise a 3-1 haul on the fly. 3. your 2nd can improvise ascending the rope (i.e. from dangling in space) 4. explain fall factor and the mechanical systems
i am probably missing a few things for general criteria
Every episode I think I I'm saturated by the puns, but then the puns go to the next level
Fantastic video, thanks for making this content!
seeing that they warn about more then 4kn, the rope actually can handle 5kn but is wasted 5.8kn... yeah, does 4kn are a good safe estimate.
Ropes can be different fresh from factory.
Ropes age differently, so warning about more then 4kn, but actually able to handle 5kn and at 5.5kn you start to see desheating... that is well done engineering.
There is "some" safety marging and there can be a serious warning (desheating) before failing- but... pushing the gear to that point is too risky.
So if someone snaps or desheats their rope, they have clearly either used spend rope and/or abused the device - which can happen, but in therms of product lyabilty, that would not be on the manufacturers of the gear.
Amazing video! I would love to see this kind of test with a rescucender or other toothless devices (someone mentioned a roll'n'lock..)!
Have you ever tested the Roll N Lock? would be interested how the different style of teeth compare.
as always, great video!
ive been using a camp lift - its a pinch type of device- curious how that would fare
Yeah, I was bothered by the fact they kept says "teeth = bad!!!" when there are lots of ascenders without teeth that are rated to the same 4kn standard.
I have watched your video and a lot of your other videos! You do a really good job 😊
However I wondered just now, if it is safer to use the micro traxion and other similar devices with unicore-rope, that supposedly are safer than other ropes due to the way they are voven/made.
Great video! Could you try with a Camp Lift ascender? The Camp Lift doesn't have teeth. I use both the micro and camp devices and think t would be interesting to compare. If you want to try to compare and need help getting the device let me know, and maybe mail you one.
YOUR REACTIONS ARE PRICELESS XD
do you mind also maybe testing the new tibloc?
Do they make ropes with dynema cores and jackets/sheaths?
its interesting to see in sailing we love grips like that. we have them holding up full sails and thats no trivial force. but then again if one does fray and snap its not going to instantly unalive someone and I've seen them snap before
Have you desheathed a rope with a traxion? Our data is on our blog www.hownot2.com/post/petzl-micro-traxion
4KN comes from the EN567.
All the best.
Ryan I was thinking about the channel and how you can make a few bucks every month ? I was thinking about how you can make bracelets or even necklaces with some of the ropes you snap on the machine. You just need someone to make the bracelets. Idk, just a thought bro.
Not with a Traxion but I did with a tibloc. I was on the Nose at night accenting a fixed line in the dark (dont ask why my headlamp was up at the next belay) and I dropped an ascender. I switched to a tibloc on top and the other ascender on bottom. The tibloc slipped as I stood in the aiders and the re-caught just above the ascender. That was enough to strip the sheath off the core. Could not really tell what happened till later at the belay looking at it with the light. Then proceeded to have a little mental breakdown.
I am just wondering, could you make a drop test on Petzl Adjust? I use it sometimes at work :) Its definitely HowNot2 :D
It happened with a Tibloc when someone from my climbing club teached how to do a regular simple hauling. Usual rope, not new, not too old.
I don't know about a micro fraction, but a basic blocker did damaged a friends rope maybe only on 1kn force
"2 meters and 13 inches" really got me.
Were you wearing Depends when you made this video?