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First rock anchor tests in the Red
Statistics are numerical generalizations, that’s all they have ever been, completely useless for forecasting an individual’s likelihood to become the “victim” of a statistic. However, I have observed that those who disregard statistics for at least a small measure of guidance more often then not fall victim to the statistic they see as useless.
Last edited by Kiribell on Wed Apr 06, 2005 10:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
TO HELL WITH YA'LL
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Zeb and I are the only guys to have fallen on a bolt and had it pull. Zeb on Sand and I on Twinkie. Years ago. Sand is still missing the bolt, I think.
Neither of us were hurt. I shit my pants. I thought my rope had frayed down to strands and the last ones were going to snap. I told Tim Cornett to dirt me in a hurry.
Neither of us were hurt. I shit my pants. I thought my rope had frayed down to strands and the last ones were going to snap. I told Tim Cornett to dirt me in a hurry.
"It really is all good ! My thinking only occasionally calls it differently..."
Normie
Normie
I thought of a way to take a harder then factor one fall on a sport route in the red, but I think it only works on paper, not in real life:
First bolt at 7 feet.
2nd bolt at 15 feet.
Fall at just before 14 feet before clipping and without pulling slack.
Belayer takes in 2+ feet of rope as you are falling.
Thus you fall almost 14 feet on 12 feet of rope = ff of just over 1.
In real life rope strech would cause you to ground out, I think.
Wes
First bolt at 7 feet.
2nd bolt at 15 feet.
Fall at just before 14 feet before clipping and without pulling slack.
Belayer takes in 2+ feet of rope as you are falling.
Thus you fall almost 14 feet on 12 feet of rope = ff of just over 1.
In real life rope strech would cause you to ground out, I think.
Wes
"There is no secret ingredient"
Po, the kung fu panda
Po, the kung fu panda