Rappelling or lowering off?

Gaston? High Step? Drop Knee? Talk in here.

In single pitch crag climbing, like most of the climbing done here in the Red, after cleaning the anchor, do you prefer to rap off or be lowered off?

You may select 1 option

43
51%
41
49%
 
Total votes: 84
 

J-Rock
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Post by J-Rock »

"Annie the Annihilator" has rap hangers. It was all I had at the time. Later I added some quicklinks and chain though.
"Those iron spikes you use have shortened the life expectancy of the Totem Pole by 50,000 years."

--A Navaho elder
dhoyne
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Post by dhoyne »

One thing I'm not sure I get is what you would do if your partner is lowering you with a grisgris and gets knocked out by a rock. Do you just hang there and squeal like a girl for them to wake up? If the route isn't overhanging to you upclimb a little to release the grisgris and then try to downclimb (yikes)?

You hang out and be thankful your belayer has a grigri, and reflect on life until you realize your pants are wet. Had she an ATC you'd be broken badly.

Sounds safer than rapping with a backup to me! :roll:
Sarcasm is a tool the weak use to avoid confrontation. People with any balls just outright lie.

[quote="Meadows"]I try not to put it in my mouth now, but when I do, I hold it with just my lips.[/quote]
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Post by Guest »

do any of you people who are talking about rock fall clobbering and knocking either a climber or belayer unconscious actually wear helmets in situations where this might be a problem? :roll:

I rappel most of the time, and OMFG, I don't use a grigri. LIVING ON THE EDGE, I tell you! In reality, I'm one of the most safety conscious climbers I know.

Can we all at least agree that if you screw up either method of descending a route, being lowered or rappelling, you are going to take the quick ride down? Both are equally safe, done correctly.
Crankmas
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Post by Crankmas »

I wear a carbon fiber condom and steel toed boots and say fuck the world alot
CincySam
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Post by CincySam »

I just don't buy that all the grooves in the rings i've seen come purely from toproping. I think lowering has a lot to do with it too. But I also don't climbing the extremely overhanging stuff, on that I might lower.
Wes
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Post by Wes »

I think most of you people should just go over to rc.com, where you can talk with other climbing theriosts about shit you really don't know that much about.

Wes
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pigsteak
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Post by pigsteak »

wes,
I'll send them your email address to get the party started.
Positive vibes brah...positive vibes.
J-Rock
Posts: 1936
Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2004 9:30 pm

Post by J-Rock »

I don't clip the rope to my harness or make a bite of rope either and I have NEVER dropped the rope. I also don't do any sort of back up when rappeling or lowering and yet I'm still here. However, once (and only once) I made the mistake of lowering from an overhanging trad route and I looked up in horror to see that the rope was cut halfway through the core (maybe as I lowered past a sharp edge?). It was a scary descent, but fortunately the few strands still intact were enough to get me to the ground. Well, that was my stupid story for the day, now off to HP40!
"Those iron spikes you use have shortened the life expectancy of the Totem Pole by 50,000 years."

--A Navaho elder
Alan Evil
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Post by Alan Evil »

CincySam wrote:I just don't buy that all the grooves in the rings i've seen come purely from toproping. I think lowering has a lot to do with it too. But I also don't climbing the extremely overhanging stuff, on that I might lower.
Of course the rings are worn from lowering. But the amount of force that comes on those rings when someone falls is staggeringly greater than the force of a rope constantly weighted. Now whether the friction/heat generation + grit factor is worse when lowering, I'm sure it is in most cases, but marginally when so. I'd bet the wear is far more pronounced on routes with both moisture and sand (so the sand sticks on the rope) present as I think Wes pointed out. That wear means you're on a popular route that has had a lot of people on it. Go pick your favorite unpopular or hard to access route and check it's anchors. The worst kind of non-rappelling sand packing toproping hangdogging ropehauling miscreants would barely leave a scratch on a chain by twos or fours. It's when there are thousands of them that you see the wear.

There have been a couple of times I really wished I'd brought some quicklinks and a set of bolt cutters with me on a route. A lot of the most popular and easier sport routes (you know, what I can drag my aging ass up) have chains that half their thickness is gone from. But at least people that care are willing to put new chains on the anchors so the anchors themselves don't wear out. Bless them.

I SO need to get out of this damned house!
[size=75]You are as bad as Alan, and even he hits the mark sometimes. -charlie

"Not all conservatives are stupid, but most stupid people are conservative." - John Stuart Mill[/size]
marathonmedic
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Post by marathonmedic »

Take it easy Alan. You'll get out soon. On foot or in a box!

As for these chains, I'm not a physics person, but it seems to me that although force will play a part, the biggest factor in wear is simple length of rope that's running through. 70 feet of lowering isn't such a big deal but it gets a lot higher when you're TRing through the chains over and over.
Ticking is gym climbing outdoors.
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