rbtree
Climbing Up
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2005
- Messages
- 1,924
- Thread Starter Thread Starter
- #51
Thanks for that, Pete. Mark and Tree Imagineeers deserve respect.
Nothing in that test comes as a surprise. Of course, any good rigger knows not to use carabiners that way. If they are used as I and others have described, there is little chance of failure.....I won't say no chance.....
I also sometimes choke my lifeline when ascending a tricky spar (if there's no high tie point, which there usually is, and most always when descending. I don't bother to do it the proper way, which utilizes a running bowline, but use a carabiner....again, in normal working situations, I fail to see much of an issue, as the stem is usually not under 6 inches, and most all slack is kept out of the system. Thus, the chances of a load approaching, say, 3 kn are minimal.
Nothing in that test comes as a surprise. Of course, any good rigger knows not to use carabiners that way. If they are used as I and others have described, there is little chance of failure.....I won't say no chance.....
I also sometimes choke my lifeline when ascending a tricky spar (if there's no high tie point, which there usually is, and most always when descending. I don't bother to do it the proper way, which utilizes a running bowline, but use a carabiner....again, in normal working situations, I fail to see much of an issue, as the stem is usually not under 6 inches, and most all slack is kept out of the system. Thus, the chances of a load approaching, say, 3 kn are minimal.