Climbing On Wet Rope?
|
So we rapped next to a water fall yesterday and the ends of the rope got wet. We still top roped the route and just left a long tail and an extra back up knot. When we pulled the rope it got the middle wet as it landed in the steram. I was going to lead the next route but was unsure of the affect water has on a rope, poor strech, slipping knots, device friction, ect. So we pack up and called it a good weekend, but my question is how safe is it to climb on wet rope? Top or lead does it matter? |
|
Think ice climbing....or rain storms for that matter. |
|
It doesn't matter; unless it was a steram of H2SO4 |
|
your rope is all damaged and not good for fair-weather climbing conditions of Cali - send it to the East Coast! |
|
? get the picture? |
|
Yep. Figured as much but didn't realy know for sure. Don't realy need a dry rope for Cali climbing, when it starts to rain again in 5 months ill go snowboarding. |
|
From Sterling Ropes Technical Manual: |
|
Ropes are weaker when they are soaked: |
|
oh please, you're not gonna snap a wet rope from a small whipper; sure, if you repeatedly bungi off a bridge, maybe that 8th launch is the killer. |
|
Sorry Mark. I've got to disagree with your first post. (It took me a while to write all this, so when I finally posted it Chase and Doug had just posted their comments) |
|
I can buy all that even if you didn't standardize; the OP isn't going to subject his rope to that kind of punishment though, which is where I was going with it. |
|
Chris Sheridan wrote:The dry group typically failed after 6 to 10 falls where as the wet group almost always failed on the third fall. A few wet ropes even failed on the second fall. The frozen ropes would typically fail on the fourth to sixth fall.Dry rope failed on the 6th-10th?!?!?! what kinda weight were you using!!! I dont understand all the physics behind it, but from my climbing history.. my ropes have taken wayyy more than 6-10 falls...(not counting bloopers) kinda bizarre the frozen one lasted longer... |
|
He's talking measurable falls, those little dink whippers with a dynamic or counterbalanced belay don't add to up to much of anything. I don't have a problem with the numbers, half-ropes have even less margin and I'm spacing out for potential falls to be much greater, but then I am counting on the opposing strand for distribution. |
|
Chris, |
|
Luke to Zuke wrote: ... kinda bizarre the frozen one lasted longer...Heat changes the plasticity of nylon polymers - heat up nylon (to a couple hundred degrees F, say) and it tears easily. With frozen ropes you just see the other end of the temperature spectrum. So when you are ice climbing, freezing and soaking have opposite effects. (Good luck working with that stiff rope, though!) Mark Nelson wrote: ... the OP isn't going to subject his rope to that kind of punishment thoughThe problem with accidents is they seldom happen exactly the way you plan them to. |
|
Luke: We were able to use an 80kg mass as per the standard UIAA test. See edits above. We used the civil engineering department's lab which had wenches and high ceilings, but not high enough to use the exact standard setup UIAA uses. |
|
Doug Hemken wrote: The problem with accidents is they seldom happen exactly the way you plan them to.As alluded, the ANAM is chock-full of wet ropes snapping on climbers and planned accidents. (sarcasm here -- as there are no...you probably get where I'm going) Like I said, I don't have a problem with the numbers, you just won't see this climbing; but it is a good point to know the limits of the rope and when to call it a day and bail. If you're repeatedly taking a 40-50 footer on the same rope that has its elasticity reduced, yes, something is going to give. |
|
Ok, so the rope should hold as long as I don't fall? Or at least 6 times on a factor 2 fall. It was a single pitch 5.6 so 6 factor 2 falls was just not going to happen but as a new climber with little expiercence I aviod taking chances when In question. Thanks guys. |
|
Brian Snider wrote:Ok, so the rope should hold as long as I don't fall? Or at least 6 times on a factor 2 fall. It was a single pitch 5.6 so 6 factor 2 falls was just not going to happen but as a new climber with little expiercence I aviod taking chances when In question. Thanks guys.Brian, It's good that you understand fall factors. If you're climbing single pitches, you have very little to worry about with a wet rope. It's good that you're cautious, though. What Mark says in this thread is sound advice. If you want to understand fall factors better, do a search on MP.com or google. When these guys talk about testing ropes, they're doing FF 2 with an 80 kg weight on the same spot in the rope repeatedly. |
|
Worth reading: alpineclubofcanada.ca/servi… |
|
Chris Sheridan wrote:We used the civil engineering department's lab which had wenches...I wish my lab had wenches. Not enough women in physics. |