Hahaha! Well it is true that most of what is in my mind is no longer fresh!
But because I am my own boss I will often take the time to play with my many tools, switching between trees, just to remind me of what each has to offer. Still like what the HH brings to the table best.
About your concerns on removing a tool for a redirect, there are other ways that you might try instead. One would be to use the tail of your rope. Toss it over your redirect crotch and once you can get the end back, tie on a carabiner. Clip the carabiner onto your climbing line above your friction device and pull it up to the redirect point. You can tie off your now floating false crotch with a retrievable or a non retrievable knot and go to work, or climb up to the new suspension point and change things from there.
There are lots of different ways to accomplish a task, you just need to find what works best for you.
Dave, your first paragraph brings up a huge point about a big advantage to being your own boss, and that is the freedom to set your own agenda. Also, the fact that you continue to push the limits of your knowledge by being willing to constantly try new things, or to revisit things you've tried already to see if there's something you might have missed the first time.
I thank you for the ideas you stated in your second paragraph. The idea of pulling my climbing line above my system up to a new redirect point, thereby eliminating the need to untie the system is a really interesting one to me, but I'm afraid I'm having difficulty understanding the methodology for being able to tie a stopper knot at a location that is remote from me. I've been playing around with a twenty foot lanyard that has biners on it for the last half hour, trying to replicate the technique, with no success. I am getting ideas from the process, however.
I'll need to search through YouTube to see if I can find any vids on how to remotely set a stopper knot.
If it were possible, it would allow you to add a redirect point to an already existing string of redirect points, without having to swap the whole system over to a new leg of rope. It would also mean that this last support point need not be six inches in diameter, capable of supporting 100% of your weight, as most of your weight would already be distributed amongst all of the other redirects.
It might be possible to put a foot ascender on the cinched leg of rope in order to climb up to the redirect point, but if it popped off during the ascent I'd be headed for a fall.
It is my own shortcoming, but the remote setting of the stopper knot is just not computing for me at this time, and I need to research the concept further in order to try to understand how it is done, if I am even understanding you correctly.
Thanks for all of your help and suggestions. Also, you were involved in the development and testing of the Hitch Hiker, were you not? If that is correct, thanks for helping to bring such a great product to the hands of climbers.
Tim