What type of belay device do you use?
- DriskellHR
- Posts: 1260
- Joined: Thu Dec 20, 2007 11:34 pm
easier to feed in my opinion. Somthing just feels wrong to me about holding the cam down. Not that the gri gri does not work but I give a better belay with an atc.bcombs wrote:I'm curious why your ATC provides a better belay on lead? When a grigri is used just like an ATC, leading is exactly the same. What issues have you had when using a grigri?DriskellHR wrote:... I will grab the ATC it keeps my belay skills frosty and provides a smoother belay on lead.
maybe thats what I should of said but then again the question was for which we prefer.[/u]
"....... Be sure to linger......." Mike Tucker
- DriskellHR
- Posts: 1260
- Joined: Thu Dec 20, 2007 11:34 pm
nope no complaints but you do smell funny.Winterstorm wrote: I don't think anyone I climb with will complain about my rope handling with either device.
Thats the key. As long as you can provide a attentive and competant belay it does not matter if you use a gri gri, atc, or figure eight they all get the job done safely.
"....... Be sure to linger......." Mike Tucker
The gri-gri is better at most things. The ATC shines when you need to give a really tough belay where you want to be able to leave as little slack as possible, but still be able to feed it out instantly for a quick clip. Other than that, the only thing the atc is good for is on a route where you will have to rapel, and don't want to carry both.
For everything else, the gri-gri wins. Hands down. its a pretty nice bonus to know that your belayer could have a heart attack while belaying and you'd still be fine.
For everything else, the gri-gri wins. Hands down. its a pretty nice bonus to know that your belayer could have a heart attack while belaying and you'd still be fine.
Last edited by Shamis on Thu Mar 20, 2008 11:49 am, edited 1 time in total.
the grigri has a built in back up. here is a situation, as unlikely as it may be, where a grigri is safer: the climber knocks loose a big block which falls down, hitting the belayer in the head rendering them unconscious, or maybe just hitting their brake hand. with a grigri, if the climber is still being belayed.anticlmber wrote:if both are used properly, how is one safer than the other??
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yeah, yeah, the old, "knocked in the head with a rock" shit. seeing how most gri-gri(french for dumb-dumb)users are sport climbers; that argument is null since most sport climbers avoid choss like the plague. if what you are climbing is that shady, wear a helmet.
also, if on a multi-pitch with a gri-gri, it is possible to be pulled into the wall, knocked out and have the gri-gri pinned against the wall; thereby disabling the "safety" mechanism IF it is not hooked on properly to avoid such a thing.
also, if on a multi-pitch with a gri-gri, it is possible to be pulled into the wall, knocked out and have the gri-gri pinned against the wall; thereby disabling the "safety" mechanism IF it is not hooked on properly to avoid such a thing.
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this is pretty messed up. the grigri in the wrong hands will kill you too. it sounds like you are arguing against belay device bigotry.
p0bray01 wrote:Depends on the situation....big climber or new climber that may hang a lot = grigri. Multipitch....ATC guide...is schweeet.
I am biased to gri-gris for single pitches only because I was dropped while someone was belaying me with an atc-xp...the reason was not the fault of the device mind you...but my belayer took me off belay because he said the the teeth side didn't "look right"....naturally this was on a crimpy route and I was going for a move as he did this...slipped...and I was on the ground....luckily we were in a gym...I was prob about 15-20 feet off the deck...
BUT in the hands of a competent person...ATC's are wonderful. I actually wanted to try the reverso..but have not had the chance.
jabberin' while belaying me on lead results in 15ft of penalty slack for you when it's my turn to belay. call it instant karma.Lander wrote:I'm more concerned about having a good belayer that pays attention than what device they use. What makes me more nervous than anything when I'm climbing is hearing my belayer jabberin' away at the base, clearly not watching me when i'm feeling sketchy. I hate that! Sometimes I'll go "Hey, are you with me?" They'll go "Yeah, I'm with ya." then go back to spraying. Jeez!
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