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NYClimber
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Apr 13, 2013
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New York
· Joined Jul 2011
· Points: 85
I saw a new style carabiner the other day (can't recall who was offering it tho) that had a 'roller' device built in to one end of it. Looked like the end that clips into your belay loop. Can anyone enlighten me on WHY and WHAT advantage(s) these might offer someone and if we really NEED such a model carabiner?
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pico
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Apr 13, 2013
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Burnaby, BC
· Joined Mar 2012
· Points: 75
DMM Revolver?! Rack as an emergency pulley.
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wivanoff
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Apr 13, 2013
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Northeast, USA
· Joined Mar 2012
· Points: 719
Not really new. Made by DMM and $$$, I believe. Some people use them to reduce rope drag, though at the price and weight, it's hard for me to see an advantage. I don't own any so someone who does may comment. Other people use them in self-rescue/hauling situations instead of a separate pulley.
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NYClimber
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Apr 13, 2013
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New York
· Joined Jul 2011
· Points: 85
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Brian C.
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Apr 13, 2013
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Longmont, CO
· Joined Feb 2010
· Points: 1,105
I've started carrying one on my harness to have my "rescue kit" on. I have not had to use it in a real-life rescue scenario yet but have played around with it a bit. It seems that it does greatly ease the ability to haul by reducing friction and is an interesting idea. My big gripe is that it is so small on one side and shaped bulkily on the other. That makes it hard to put several things on it and be able to handle it easily. I only carry 2 short prussik slings, a tiny knife and a tibloc and it barely fits and even when it's just right, then the gate doesn't open all the way. It'll be interesting to see if I continue to carry it. It would make my life much easier in a hauling scenario and that would make carrying it worth it, but in all reality that kind of situation rarely happens. That said, it does happen and I did find myself hauling an inexperienced partner through a crux section once and would have killed for one of these at the time. Bottom line though is that I would NEVER carry these to replace normal carabiners.
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NYClimber
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Apr 13, 2013
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New York
· Joined Jul 2011
· Points: 85
Yeah - when I first saw it I thought - "OK, does this new design attempt to solve a problem that doesn't really exist?"
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Larry S
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Apr 13, 2013
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Easton, PA
· Joined May 2010
· Points: 872
I bought two of them years ago, don't really know why. They can come in handy if you're on a route that makes some hard direction changes where you would normally want double ropes, or in a rescue/haul situation... I carry them setup as a normal quickdraw and 99% of the time it doesn't matter that they have the roller on them.
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nick manning
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Apr 13, 2013
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superior,az
· Joined Jan 2013
· Points: 0
Hudon refers to those in a video on hauling
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bearbreeder
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Apr 13, 2013
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Mar 2009
· Points: 3,065
i own and use 2 of em to reduce drag ... there are certain climbs/pitches that even when extended with a long sling the rope has a sharp bend ... of course you could use doubles, but for double the price and wear (i got through ropes every few months) id be poor ... you dont need it ... but they do work ... and as mentioned if you need to make a quick adhoc pulley it works well for that
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Garret Nuzzo Jones
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Apr 13, 2013
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Salt Lake City, UT
· Joined Feb 2012
· Points: 1,436
NYClimber wrote:Yeah - when I first saw it I thought - "OK, does this new design attempt to solve a problem that doesn't really exist?" I thought BD had a corner on that.
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JCM
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Apr 13, 2013
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Jun 2008
· Points: 115
Although I don't own any, I have used them when a climbing partner had one or two. They are actually quite useful, in certain situations. They are a specialized piece, and no one would (or, at least, should) buy an entire rack's worth of them. Having one or two, to use in the right situations, might be worthwhile. No one "needs" them, of course, but they are just another trick up one's sleeve. A great application is for the sharp bend created in the rope for the piece at the beginning of a big roof. Extending the piece helps only so much if the roof is large; the revolver helps a lot here. If I were a Gunks climber, and thus climbed a lot of roofs, I would definitely keep one or two revolver biners on the rack for this use.
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Mr. Holmes
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Apr 13, 2013
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Cascade West
· Joined Dec 2010
· Points: 75
bearbreeder wrote:i own and use 2 of em to reduce drag ... there are certain climbs/pitches that even when extended with a long sling the rope has a sharp bend ... of course you could use doubles, but for double the price and wear (i got through ropes every few months) id be poor ... you dont need it ... but they do work ... and as mentioned if you need to make a quick adhoc pulley it works well for that +1 I have two as well and have found them well qualified for ledgy traversing trad lines where you may want to minimize the fall factors of double length runners, etc. They do however rotate easily making them ineffective- a simple hair tie or rubber stopper opposite the rope bearing serface did the trick nicely though to keep the rope seated on the roller.
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Charlie S
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Apr 13, 2013
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NV
· Joined Aug 2007
· Points: 2,415
I have 2 of the wiregate version and 2 of the locking. I have used the wiregate ones on traversing routes and found them useful. The locking ones I use as my toprope setup, but they require a third biner in the middle to separate them. Otherwise, the two wheels grind against each other. This drastically decreases the amount of aluminum oxide on my rope. Now cue someone getting all bent out of shape about how they're not supposed to be used for toproping. To which I reply: the worst that will happen is someone gets lowered too fast (yet to happen in my case), and the bearing/axle assembly overheats, melts, and siezes the mechanism. Now you just have a very expensive non-rotating wheel biner.
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Mr. Holmes
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Apr 13, 2013
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Cascade West
· Joined Dec 2010
· Points: 75
Charlie S wrote: Now cue someone getting all bent out of shape about how they're not supposed to be used for toproping. To which I reply: the worst that will happen is someone gets lowered too fast (yet to happen in my case), and the bearing/axle assembly overheats, melts, and siezes the mechanism. Now you just have a very expensive non-rotating wheel biner. YER GONNA DIE!!!!
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Brian in SLC
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Apr 13, 2013
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Sandy, UT
· Joined Oct 2003
· Points: 22,419
I use one as a top biner for RADS (Yo Yo) rope juggin'. Shortens the throw and seems more efficient rather than adding a biner and a pulley.
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Woodchuck ATC
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Apr 13, 2013
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Nov 2007
· Points: 3,305
Never saw it intended as a 'rescue' pulley device. It's supposed to be for hard rope drag, (usually trad climb related),,and yes it costs a bundle and is more weight than most sportys want to carry around with the available 23 gm. 'biners out there now days. It's been around for well over 10 years by now,,I got one just to try it out but not a needed piece of gear.
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Tzilla Rapdrilla
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Apr 15, 2013
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Jan 2006
· Points: 970
I have two of them and use them in various ways on trad routes and sport routes, especially when the route changes directions. They work great for reducing rope drag on long pitches. I would caution against using them at the top anchor as they reduce the friction too much. I have personal experience with that. If you do, tie the belayer down to a tree or something and you should be OK.
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Larry
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Apr 15, 2013
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SoAZ
· Joined Jan 2006
· Points: 50
I was given one as a gift. When I deploy it, it is inevitably before or after where the route actually changes direction.
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Rob WardenSpaceLizard
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Apr 15, 2013
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las Vegans, the cosmic void
· Joined Dec 2011
· Points: 130
i have three set up as alpine draws and use them alot linking pitches. there is a drastic decrease in rope drag on long trad routes...I would use them in emergancy rescue your hauling in conjuction with my Mirco trax but for the most part they are a slick way to make going up 70ms in a row easy
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Charlie S
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Apr 15, 2013
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NV
· Joined Aug 2007
· Points: 2,415
Tzilla Rapdrilla wrote:I have two of them and use them in various ways on trad routes and sport routes, especially when the route changes directions. They work great for reducing rope drag on long pitches. I would caution against using them at the top anchor as they reduce the friction too much. I have personal experience with that. If you do, tie the belayer down to a tree or something and you should be OK. My belayers must weigh a lot more than me. I've actually not noticed this problem. +1 to the YER GONNA DIE post!
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Martin le Roux
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Apr 16, 2013
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Superior, CO
· Joined Jul 2003
· Points: 416
They're useful gear for glacier travel where there's a risk that you might have to haul someone out of a crevasse.
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