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The unofficial LRS Sulu Go thread

that guy named seb · · Britland · Joined Oct 2015 · Points: 236

This is the best set up I have found, I'm going to replace a tweak a things here and there but overall I'm very happy with this, auto feeds very well with a cache loop and reasonably well without. The top pulley is a game changer. 

Rope is configured same as Mr Rogers and Evan. 

It doesn't auto feed on a traverse and will lock up but I think when it does lockup it's actually much easier to unlock it than something like a grigri. 

evan freeman · · Carson City · Joined Apr 2017 · Points: 0


Edit for Mountain Hick:
The inverted fall scenario that can usually defeat the device is no present with this setup. That where the rope itself basically pushes down on the caming mechanism when upside down in a fall.
I'll post some more to show what I mean so clarity is had. Apologies I caused some confusion with my quick little stamen I made there around it.

I don't think the Sulu is fundamentally different than the others for inverted falls.  When you're upside down, the rope is feeding in the same direction as when you're climbing, so it will just keep running through.  The Sulu (LOV, GG, etc) requires an angle change to lock.

However, since the Sulu does seem to lock aggressively with any traverse, it might be more likely to lock than some others in an USD fall that's not perfectly vertical, but I'll be using a backup as always.  Definitely test this thoroughly before you trust it without a backup!

SICgrips · · Charlottesville · Joined Dec 2012 · Points: 146
evan freeman wrote:

I don't think the Sulu is fundamentally different than the others for inverted falls.  When you're upside down, the rope is feeding in the same direction as when you're climbing, so it will just keep running through.  The Sulu (LOV, GG, etc) requires an angle change to lock.

It does have one further potential drawback for locking up in falls that are forward. I realize almost all falls are backwards away from the wall. However, if one falls forward into the rope which could prevent it from pivoting up like could happen with all the devices mentioned above, it also has the drawback that if there is any pressure at all (pressing forward against the rope/rock/whatever) or pinched between the legs as has already been reported on the FB TRS list , the "sled"/parallel jaws/rope channel opens slightly and friction goes to near zero. This is probably more likely to happen in TRS than LRS and a good reason to have some type of backup.

Mr Rogers · · Pollock Pines and Bay area CA · Joined Aug 2010 · Points: 72
evan freeman wrote:

I don't think the Sulu is fundamentally different than the others for inverted falls.  When you're upside down, the rope is feeding in the same direction as when you're climbing, so it will just keep running through.  The Sulu (LOV, GG, etc) requires an angle change to lock.

However, since the Sulu does seem to lock aggressively with any traverse, it might be more likely to lock than some others in an USD fall that's not perfectly vertical, but I'll be using a backup as always.  Definitely test this thoroughly before you trust it without a backup!

Yeah, I played with it some more after my initial 30 second synposis of an inverted postion....So, I think it is possible to defeat in an inverted fall for sure. I will post up some stuff around how I think it will fair better than the failure on GG based upon orientation of the device(sideways). Since rain is coming in, I'll do some testing in the garage "lab" around it sometime this week.
Orienting the Sulu like you belay with it, would not be subject to the inverted fall issue (same for the GG), but, I have not found a way to facilitate good feeding rope without putting the device into a position that brings this failure to the table again.

And agreed, backing up the SULU (heck any device) in LRS is a not optional, but a need IMO.

Oh and Seb, the pulley redirect you got up on your chest harness, I suggest a Petzl rollclip or DMM revolver for cleaner setup =)

Ricky Harline · · Angel's Camp, CA · Joined Nov 2016 · Points: 147

@Mr Rogers:

I made an invert tester out of a 2x4, perhaps you could do something similar? 

that guy named seb · · Britland · Joined Oct 2015 · Points: 236
Mr Rogers wrote:

Yeah, I played with it some more after my initial 30 second synposis of an inverted postion....So, I think it is possible to defeat in an inverted fall for sure. I will post up some stuff around how I think it will fair better than the failure on GG based upon orientation of the device(sideways). Since rain is coming in, I'll do some testing in the garage "lab" around it sometime this week.
Orienting the Sulu like you belay with it, would not be subject to the inverted fall issue (same for the GG), but, I have not found a way to facilitate good feeding rope without putting the device into a position that brings this failure to the table again.

I'm going to try doing some human testing for upside down falls at some point, might film it and post if funny. Will report back.

Oh and Seb, the pulley redirect you got up on your chest harness, I suggest a Petzl rollclip or DMM revolver for cleaner setup =)

I'd love a dedicated pulley biner but I am far too poor for that. 

Brocky · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Jun 2016 · Points: 0

A cheaper option, with easy on and off of the rope, is a fixed plate pulley, attached directly to shoulder harness.

that guy named seb · · Britland · Joined Oct 2015 · Points: 236

While far from definitive I just spent 45 minutes trying to make the sulu go fail with me as the test dummy, while some of these falls probably couldn't be considered as truly upside falls. I couldn't get anymore than a few inches of rope to travel through the device in any of these falls. 

https://youtube.com/shorts/_a_qCE48-O0?si=coh_TTWOKwJuqAQf

28 seconds of me failing to fall on my head. 

Jared E · · CO-based healthcare traveler · Joined Nov 2022 · Points: 356

Personally, I think the vergo still wins out in LRS. It’s smaller, lighter, better in traverses, and just as reliable. Maybe there’s a hair more friction but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Besides that, the vergo has all the same benefits of the sulu except the swivel cheek.

That said, sulu is the clear, objective winner in TRS, and in my personal opinion a better general belay device.

Ricky Harline · · Angel's Camp, CA · Joined Nov 2016 · Points: 147
Jared E wrote:

Personally, I think the vergo still wins out in LRS. It’s smaller, lighter, better in traverses, and just as reliable. Maybe there’s a hair more friction but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Besides that, the vergo has all the same benefits of the sulu except the swivel cheek.

That said, sulu is the clear, objective winner in TRS, and in my personal opinion a better general belay device.

God damnit, Jared. You're terrible for my gear acquisition syndrome, you know that? 

Cosmic Hotdog · · Southern California · Joined Sep 2019 · Points: 290
Ricky Harline wrote:

God damnit, Jared. You're terrible for my gear acquisition syndrome, you know that? 

I too have bad GAS, Ricky

Luke Lalor · · Bellevue, WA · Joined Sep 2017 · Points: 10

Can people more knowledgeable explain something to me?

My understanding is that with a gri-gri falling upside down is a problem since you have no weight on the brake strand (due to freefalling brake strand) and the rope is pulling through in a low friction direction so it doesn't engage the cam. With the sulu, isn't it just in trs mode with an unweighted brake strand (ie, a totally supported mode). I suspect I am missing something.

that guy named seb · · Britland · Joined Oct 2015 · Points: 236
Jared E wrote:

Personally, I think the vergo still wins out in LRS. It’s smaller, lighter, better in traverses, and just as reliable. Maybe there’s a hair more friction but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Besides that, the vergo has all the same benefits of the sulu except the swivel cheek.

That said, sulu is the clear, objective winner in TRS, and in my personal opinion a better general belay device.

Your claim of "just as reliable" seems dubious at best, please expand on that. 

Luke you're pretty much right, I think there is a general lack of understanding as to how this device works. 

evan freeman · · Carson City · Joined Apr 2017 · Points: 0
that guy named seb wrote:

While far from definitive I just spent 45 minutes trying to make the sulu go fail with me as the test dummy, while some of these falls probably couldn't be considered as truly upside falls. I couldn't get anymore than a few inches of rope to travel through the device in any of these falls. 

https://youtube.com/shorts/_a_qCE48-O0?si=coh_TTWOKwJuqAQf

28 seconds of me failing to fall on my head. 

Excellent work!  I did tests like this with a GG, El Mudo, & LOV but haven't done it yet with the Sulu.  I found that I would just fall until my backup caught, but I didn't leave very much slack so maybe they would have eventually caught.

Your test lends a bit of data to my suspicion that the Sulu is more likely to catch USD falls than some other devices.  It's hard to tell from the video, but do you think your legs started to come down only after the Sulu had caught, or did your body rotating inititate the catch?  That would be an important distinction....

that guy named seb · · Britland · Joined Oct 2015 · Points: 236
evan freeman wrote:

Excellent work!  I did tests like this with a GG, El Mudo, & LOV but haven't done it yet with the Sulu.  I found that I would just fall until my backup caught, but I didn't leave very much slack so maybe they would have eventually caught.

Your test lends a bit of data to my suspicion that the Sulu is more likely to catch USD falls than some other devices.  It's hard to tell from the video, but do you think your legs started to come down only after the Sulu had caught, or did your body rotating inititate the catch?  That would be an important distinction....

It is a very important distinction, they definitely came down early in the earlier clips but as the test went on I got more an more comfortable in that upside down position and they wouldn't come down until the device caught, you can see this with the big swing in the final catch. 

Jared E · · CO-based healthcare traveler · Joined Nov 2022 · Points: 356
that guy named seb wrote:

It is a very important distinction, they definitely came down early in the earlier clips but as the test went on I got more an more comfortable in that upside down position and they wouldn't come down until the device caught, you can see this with the big swing in the final catch. 

The vergo is springless and pinches the rope between two counter-rotating plates. So long as you’re not falling inverted, it would be impossible for the vergo to not catch you short of a catastrophic failure which has never occurred.

Mr Rogers · · Pollock Pines and Bay area CA · Joined Aug 2010 · Points: 72

Video of couple laps today. I switched up the set up slightly.
Questions welcome, it's a very mediocre vid. My back up system in particular is not explained here, but other vids on my YouTube channel show what I got goin' on in that respect.
Traversing def will not be auto feeding if the rope is in line horizontally with the device or higher. Moving left and right while on route is no issue.


Notable changes:
Cache management / back up are now on right side
Device is now facing 180º from original orientation. IE - handle against body now.
Pulley above device facilitating über smooth feeding. This is not necessary, but I think it helps just be smoother all around in function. 

that guy named seb · · Britland · Joined Oct 2015 · Points: 236

So for those who have the device and played with it. It's clear from use that the most important aspect in this set up is the angle the live end leaves the device and the dead end of the rope has very little impact, with this in mind, does anyone have any ideas on how we could either force the angle in a fall or have the backup be on the live end? It seems to me the usual backup on the deadend would do little to achieve the all important angle change to get the device to lock. 

As these setups seem to be consolidating on having the device lifted up high on the chest I would think the best place for the backup would be the lower tie in point. Maybe something like the rocker? maybe a weak bungee redirect? Not sure. 

Any ideas? 

Jared E · · CO-based healthcare traveler · Joined Nov 2022 · Points: 356
that guy named seb wrote:

So for those who have the device and played with it. It's clear from use that the most important aspect in this set up is the angle the live end leaves the device and the dead end of the rope has very little impact, with this in mind, does anyone have any ideas on how we could either force the angle in a fall or have the backup be on the live end? It seems to me the usual backup on the deadend would do little to achieve the all important angle change to get the device to lock. 

As these setups seem to be consolidating on having the device lifted up high on the chest I would think the best place for the backup would be the lower tie in point. Maybe something like the rocker? maybe a weak bungee redirect? Not sure. 

Any ideas? 

This would presumably be fatal. Having the backup on the live end wouldn’t allow the rope to force rotation of the sulu, and rope would just fly through it. It HAS to be on the dead rope side. The setup should be fairly similar to the vergo or LOV LRS setups. I’ve taken an inverted fall on a vergo-fuse and that worked

Mr Rogers · · Pollock Pines and Bay area CA · Joined Aug 2010 · Points: 72

Seb:
Sure, but has to be momentum based right? and with current options would be hard to imagine a good way to rig that and still be functional for LRS.

Also, the way I understand the device mechanics, the dead end absolutely has an impact on the device locking up if it were to be "engaged" during a fall if the sulu was not locking up on its own. How do you come to the conclusion the brake stand being held/toggled would not help the SULU to engage?

Jared:
It shouldn't matter the SULU doesn't rotate if the "backup" does its job irregardless of what side it is on in theory.
The idea of a back up is it can hold the fall without the primary functioning. Or am I missing something here?

Guideline #1: Don't be a jerk.

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