Wes wrote:Please don't put locktight on screw links, because other people might think they are in a bad spot and want to remove them.
Guess I'm not sure I understand, Wes. To clarify my comment: I suggest that qualified route developers put Loctite on screw links installed on top anchors -- either in conjunction with or without chains, depending on the configuration the developer chose for that particular anchor system. Those of you who saw the quick link blow out at the testing portion of the Bolting Clinic at Muir during Rawk n Rawkus saw how dangerously weak a partially threaded quick link can be. Locktite, properly applied, can ensure the things stay fully threaded.
If a climber uses quicklinks in addition to the ones originally installed at the top anchors, or he chooses to bail on one elsewhere on a hanger on the route, then that is a different matter. In this case many climbers would consider the screw link (without Loctite) to be booty.
Regardless, there are many opinions on what hardware to use and how to place it. It is often amusing to see two well-respected route developers ferverently disagree on how a route should be bolted and what hardware to use. Most often, the truth is that they are both right. Just two different opinions.
The bottom line is that if you choose to use a quick link, and if you choose to Loctite it, be sure the thing is fully threaded closed. Red Loctite is permanent (short of torching it.) And, blue Loctite allows unthreading with a wrench.
Rick
We cannot change the cards we are dealt, just how we play the hand. - Randy Pausch
None are so old as those who have outlived enthusiasm. - Henry David Thoreau