Extended Rappel Variation
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Pretty nifty set up. I'm a also a PAS guy. it is quick and very adjustable. Even with the PAS i'll sometimes use the rope to anchor for many situations. Extending the rappel is something I always do. It is more comfortable, easier to negotiate overhanging terrain, sets up for a backup nicely. Also, having your setup or a PAS has come in handy more than once for building and anchor after running out of slings on a long pitch. Note: I thread my PAS through the power points on my harness. It doesnt hurt to reinforce these since there is a lot of wear that occurs over time. I use a harness protector made by Wild Country. |
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I use a auto block myself and have not needed to extend my rap device out beyond my belay loop at all! The KEY is to keep the cord the right length so it doesn't go too far up the rope and jam or get too close to the rap device! One accomplished - I have no issues with my auto block at all! |
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This is what I do: |
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wivanoff wrote:This is what I do: 1) Girth-hitch a 4-foot sling through the harness tie-in points. 2) Clip a locking carabiner into the sling. 3) Fold the sling in half and clip the locking carabiner to the belay loop. 4) Pull out the sling and tie an overhand knot loop. 5) Use a second locking carabiner to clip the belay device into both strands of the overhand loop. At the next anchor, I unclip the locking carabiner from the belay loop and clip it into the anchor. Off rappel. Pull down the rope and set the next rap station. Reattach rappel device. Test. Unclip locking carabiner from the anchor and clip it back to my belay loop. Rappel to the next anchor. I am never unanchored and there's a minimum of cluster. I think this is a pretty standard way of doing it. We try to have the first climber down use an autoblock but subsequent climbers get a fireman's belay. Can you explain the advantage of your sliding X system? When the second climber arrives at the anchor does she clip both ends of her sliding X to the anchors so that there are now two sliding Xs?This is what I do as well. Autoblock myself every rap - as MANY climbers 'get the chop' when rapping according to statistics! I use a autoblock ALL THE TIME - a firemans belay might take too look to do and requires yet another rope being employed! I too have a runner - tied or sewn - girth hitched into my belay loop with a Twistlock on the one end ready to anchor myself as soon as I hit the next rap anchor(s). Only THEN do I remove the rope from my rap device after triple-checking my connection to the new rap anchor(s). Simple, uncluttered and works well. I don't like having MY RAP DEVICE way the frig out of my reach! |
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Michael Urban wrote:a firemans belay might take too look to do and requires yet another rope being employed!Another rope? Where? Michael Urban wrote: I don't like having MY RAP DEVICE way the frig out of my reach!It's basically at eye level. You must have very short arms if you can't reach your rap device less than 2 feet above your tie in point ;) Edit: Added link |
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A few points about some of the systems mentioned- |
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This thread has been all over the place but in the end I am glad that people are making an effort to extend the belay device and use friction hitches to back up their rappels. It blows my mind that many people don't. |
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Hi, |
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Michael Urban wrote:Secondly I'd like to know why a belay loop may have failed when BD and others INSIST that the belay loop should ALWAYS BE USED instead of hooking your locker thru your waistbelt and leg loops of the harness. I believe the belay loop HAS been shown to be damn strong.It IS damn strong. The primary reason for not "hooking your locker thru your waistbelt and leg loops of the harness" is: improper loading of the carabiner. Any failures I've heard of were due to the belay loop being overly worn on a harness that should have been retired. If you mean this statement: "I just had an article about this and found that friction hitch connected to a belay loop and an atc on the belay loop failed 100% of the time." He means the friction hitch failed, not the belay loop. I believe the article was discussing friction hitches above the ATC, but I'm not sure about that. Michael Urban wrote:I don't mean to be wise or cocky - but the autoblock works so well and is so easy to set up I can't see the need for a Fireman's belay honestly. ???Having the first person down use an autoblock and then the rest of the party having a fireman's belay is actually faster than everyone using an autoblock - particularly when there are several in the party. Further, some feel there are safety issues. I'll quote from another thread on MP for one example: "If you think the only way you'd let go of the rope is if you are unconscious, then it pays to think through what is going to happen when you are hanging unconscious on the rope half way down. You'll die of orthostatic shock if someone doesn't get to you and get you out of the hanging posture, but it will be very difficult for the rest of your party to do this, especially if they are above you. I think only the first person down should use a backup when circumstances seem to require it. Once they are down, the rest of the party is far better protected by a "fireman's belay" from below, which will allow the party to lower an unconscious climber down to them." |
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wivanoff wrote: Having the first person down use an autoblock and then the rest of the party having a fireman's belay is actually faster than everyone using an autoblock - particularly when there are several in the party. Further, some feel there are safety issues. I'll quote from another thread on MP for one example: "If you think the only way you'd let go of the rope is if you are unconscious, then it pays to think through what is going to happen when you are hanging unconscious on the rope half way down. You'll die of orthostatic shock if someone doesn't get to you and get you out of the hanging posture, but it will be very difficult for the rest of your party to do this, especially if they are above you. I think only the first person down should use a backup when circumstances seem to require it. Once they are down, the rest of the party is far better protected by a "fireman's belay" from below, which will allow the party to lower an unconscious climber down to them."Very important point! Imagine the second rapeller gets knocked unconscious by rockfall. If he's rigged an auto-block you now have to ascend the rope to get him, all the while hoping that his auto-block doesn't slip & drop him on top of you. If you're using a fireman's belay you simply lower the unconscious rapper. Back to the rappel extensions, I think all of them pictured here so far will work fine. Mainly a matter of what material you have on hand, and your personal preferences. My preference is to have my clip in carabiner on a much longer tether than my ATC, that way I can fully weight my ATC (and make sure I've rigged it right) before I un-clip from the anchor. This also saves having to mule off the atc, to lift myself up & un-clip the tether. My method does look complicated as hell, but actually it's only a sling with an overhand & another with a girth. |
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wivanoff wrote: It IS damn strong. The primary reason for not "hooking your locker thru your waistbelt and leg loops of the harness" is: improper loading of the carabiner. Any failures I've heard of were due to the belay loop being overly worn on a harness that should have been retired. If you mean this statement: "I just had an article about this and found that friction hitch connected to a belay loop and an atc on the belay loop failed 100% of the time." He means the friction hitch failed, not the belay loop. I believe the article was discussing friction hitches above the ATC, but I'm not sure about that. Having the first person down use an autoblock and then the rest of the party having a fireman's belay is actually faster than everyone using an autoblock - particularly when there are several in the party. Further, some feel there are safety issues. I'll quote from another thread on MP for one example: "If you think the only way you'd let go of the rope is if you are unconscious, then it pays to think through what is going to happen when you are hanging unconscious on the rope half way down. You'll die of orthostatic shock if someone doesn't get to you and get you out of the hanging posture, but it will be very difficult for the rest of your party to do this, especially if they are above you. I think only the first person down should use a backup when circumstances seem to require it. Once they are down, the rest of the party is far better protected by a "fireman's belay" from below, which will allow the party to lower an unconscious climber down to them."Well then, so if one adds a SLING or RUNNER to their belay loop to extend their ATC - isn't THAT a risk venture then? I have never felt the need for a Fireman's belay from above. yeah I am sure it's nice, but someone belaying you from above tru a belay device sin't going to be able to feed rope OUT as you belay fast enuff I would think. Also, should something happen to the first or second person rapping and they went unconscious - all the last person from above has to do is just RAP down to them instead of all this fuss with a Fireman's belay! Maybe I am missing something but I just don't see the need for someone belyaing me when I have an autoblock right in my braking hand as I rap in a slow, controlled manner with my rap device within the normal reach. My Autoblock is rigged so it doens't even get NEAR my ATC or my Fig 8!!!! I dunno - to me it seems like "If it ain't broken don't fix it" kinda deal. But hey - maybe it's just ME! |
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I've been though many phases of rappelling. |
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wivanoff wrote: Having the first person down use an autoblock and then the rest of the party having a fireman's belay is actually faster than everyone using an autoblock - particularly when there are several in the party. Further, some feel there are safety issues. I'll quote from another thread on MP for one example: "If you think the only way you'd let go of the rope is if you are unconscious, then it pays to think through what is going to happen when you are hanging unconscious on the rope half way down. You'll die of orthostatic shock if someone doesn't get to you and get you out of the hanging posture, but it will be very difficult for the rest of your party to do this, especially if they are above you. I think only the first person down should use a backup when circumstances seem to require it. Once they are down, the rest of the party is far better protected by a "fireman's belay" from below, which will allow the party to lower an unconscious climber down to them."thats a good method, I'll remember that next time I'm trying to hurry people down who all insist on a backup. I usually only tie knots in the end and go but I've painfully waited at some of the Gunks rap stations while people ahead spent an hour backing themselves up |
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Michael Urban wrote: I have never felt the need for a Fireman's belay from above. yeah I am sure it's nice, but someone belaying you from above tru a belay device sin't going to be able to feed rope OUT as you belay fast enuff I would think. Also, should something happen to the first or second person rapping and they went unconscious - all the last person from above has to do is just RAP down to them instead of all this fuss with a Fireman's belay! Maybe I am missing something but I just don't see the need for someone belyaing me when I have an autoblock right in my braking hand as I rap in a slow, controlled manner with my rap device within the normal reach. My Autoblock is rigged so it doens't even get NEAR my ATC or my Fig 8!!!! I dunno - to me it seems like "If it ain't broken don't fix it" kinda deal. But hey - maybe it's just ME!http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HJ2OFND4_m0 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V2f-MZ2HRHQ |
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Michael Urban wrote: Well then, so if one adds a SLING or RUNNER to their belay loop to extend their ATC - isn't THAT a risk venture then?Why would it be? You don't trust a 22kN sling DOUBLED? You could also say that getting clothing jammed up in a rap device that is too close to the climber is a risk venture. BTW, extending the device has another advantage that I did not mention: you can have BOTH hands on the brake side of the rappel device Michael Urban wrote:I have never felt the need for a Fireman's belay from above. yeah I am sure it's nice, but someone belaying you from above tru a belay device sin't going to be able to feed rope OUT as you belay fast enuff I would think.Please Google "fireman's belay". You clearly do not know what it is. Michael Urban wrote:Also, should something happen to the first or second person rapping and they went unconscious - all the last person from above has to do is just RAP down to them instead of all this fuss with a Fireman's belay!Try rapping down on a rope that is loaded by a climber's weight. Michael Urban wrote: Maybe I am missing something but I just don't see the need for someone belyaing me when I have an autoblock right in my braking hand as I rap in a slow, controlled manner with my rap device within the normal reach.At this point, I don't know if you are missing something or just trolling me. You would not use a fireman's belay AND an autoblock at the same time. I already explained that a fireman's belay would be faster than each person using an autoblock - especially when several people are involved. |
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MTKirk wrote: Very important point! Imagine the second rapeller gets knocked unconscious by rockfall. If he's rigged an auto-block you now have to ascend the rope to get him, all the while hoping that his auto-block doesn't slip & drop him on top of you. If you're using a fireman's belay you simply lower the unconscious rapper. Back to the rappel extensions, I think all of them pictured here so far will work fine. Mainly a matter of what material you have on hand, and your personal preferences. My preference is to have my clip in carabiner on a much longer tether than my ATC, that way I can fully weight my ATC (and make sure I've rigged it right) before I un-clip from the anchor. This also saves having to mule off the atc, to lift myself up & un-clip the tether. My method does look complicated as hell, but actually it's only a sling with an overhand & another with a girth.That's not quite the case. The weight of the rescuer ascending the brake strand of the rope locks off the device. Ascend rope to injured partner. Remove partner's autobloc. Descend rope back to ground or next anchor. Anchor in. Lock off fireman's belay. Remove tension from your rope climbing system. Perform fireman's belay to lower injured climber. |
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Thank you Kirk. Thank you wivanoff. |
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@ZachR im diggin it |
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wivanoff wrote: Why would it be? You don't trust a 22kN sling DOUBLED? You could also say that getting clothing jammed up in a rap device that is too close to the climber is a risk venture. BTW, extending the device has another advantage that I did not mention: you can have BOTH hands on the brake side of the rappel device Please Google "fireman's belay". You clearly do not know what it is. Try rapping down on a rope that is loaded by a climber's weight. At this point, I don't know if you are missing something or just trolling me. You would not use a fireman's belay AND an autoblock at the same time. I already explained that a fireman's belay would be faster than each person using an autoblock - especially when several people are involved.Well dude, you're NOT going to do that - because you'd HAVE a 2nd rope to be doing a Fireman's belay anyway, right? So just let them rap using their autoblock and if something happens - use the rope that you would use for a Fireman's belay to rap down! Simple! No need to make this more complicated! My autoblock has never failed me yet and I know all about Orthostatic issues if flipped upside down as I an a RN bro! |
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Michael Urban wrote: Well dude, you're NOT going to do that - because you'd HAVE a 2nd rope to be doing a Fireman's belay anyway, right? So just let them rap using their autoblock and if something happens - use the rope that you would use for a Fireman's belay to rap down! Simple! No need to make this more complicated! My autoblock has never failed me yet and I know all about Orthostatic issues if flipped upside down as I an a RN bro!A fireman's belay does NOT require a second rope. The 'belayer' is just holding the bottom of the rope the his partner is descending on. If the descending climber loses control, the 'belayer' applies downward force to the rope. This has the exact same result as the descending climbing applying downward force on the brake strand, as it is the same piece of rope. |