well hell, KD, then stick around. Just make sure you sack up when you click here
Sorry about the pic. I didn't see any naughty bits so I figured it was okay. Those slack-ass mods should have caught it I suppose.
Can you squish a rope and make it useless?
No problem, thanks.
so, any recomendations on a good working, long lasting trad rope. I've been looking at a blue water excelerator (spelling might be off) because it's a 70 meter but I havent used their ropes before. The mammut had the best hand of any rope I've ever had but it just didnt stand the time test for me.
so, any recomendations on a good working, long lasting trad rope. I've been looking at a blue water excelerator (spelling might be off) because it's a 70 meter but I havent used their ropes before. The mammut had the best hand of any rope I've ever had but it just didnt stand the time test for me.
KD I have a Bluewater Accelerator with a double dry treatment. I like it a great deal. The hand is nice and the rope has not become stiff over time like PMI's tend to do. It is also wearing very minimally. I do hate the way it can stick in my belay device (Jaws) when it's humid outside, though. The dry coating has kept it nice and clean (and dry of course), but I think it doesn't like humidity.
I'd definitely get another one of these ropes, though, and with the dry treatment - despite the sticking issue. It's not that big of a problem.
I'd definitely get another one of these ropes, though, and with the dry treatment - despite the sticking issue. It's not that big of a problem.
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- Posts: 1566
- Joined: Mon Oct 07, 2002 2:22 am
Just use the gri-gri properly... we have gri-gri's set up at every rope station at our climbing gym. Now you are talking, these ropes get high traffic! Probably 100+ climbers per day on a single rope station every Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Tuesday, and Thursday. We check our equipment once a month and our average rope replacement rate is like 8 months to a year. Sometimes longer... That is why I asked earlier how many people have actually had to retire a rope because they were using a gri-gri? Just doesn't make since...toddc wrote:I have been using the grigri wrong all this time. Maybe that's why my ropes have so many kinks. Guess I will start using an ATC more often.
Not a bitch.
I have had some sterling ropes and liked them for sport. I used to use the vdry when sterling made those but i wore them out fast on trad climbs. I haven't had a blue water before and like that it comes in 70 meters too, gives you longer pitches. I'm leaning toward one. I still tend to believe that putting my rope in the bottom of my pack was probably a bad idea for it though. I tend to carry big pieces and draws, slings, etc. and my rack can be pretty weighty. I also tend to keep my pack packed between weekends, In summers i almost never unpack because I'm off everyday and this is bound to compact things.