8mm acc cord
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Here's another one- |
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Assuming that the masterpoint is redundant this is fine, and there is no reason why you would ever generate this amount of force in a top rope situation. With that being said, there are many situations in which I would not find it acceptable. Most notably, I would not us 8mm cord if it was running over a sharp edge. In this case I would prefer a beefy static. Use your discretion and assess each anchor individually and make decisions on a case by case basis. |
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Sure, why not? Each leg is to a bolt or a tree, right? Redundancy through your fig-8 on a bight masterpoint. Not over any sharp edges? Sounds good to me. |
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Dylan B. wrote: no leg will take more than ~ 33% of the force of the fall.Well, I guess I'll go ahead and get this started... "john long john long john long, craig luebben craig luebben, john long..." "some tests in soviet laboratories in the 80's..." On a more serious note, these are kind of interesting: petzl.com/en/Sport/Forces-a… petzl.com/en/Sport/Influenc… petzl.com/en/Sport/Conseque… petzl.com/en/Sport/Fall-com… |
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edennis wrote:Here's another one- Would you use 8mm accessory cord with a strength rating of 15.6kn for a top rope anchor not doubled up- single strand on each leg?I use it all the time. If you are using a dynamic rope and you can generate 15kN, or even 7kN you are the man. I'm not one of those people that likes to make my anchors just good enough, usually I like to be able to drop a bus off them. but you do have to have some concept of the forces before freaking out. Two independent strands equalized is a rundundant anchor, the failure point would most likely not be the 8mm cord but the anchor point itself, or heck, even the carabiners before the 8mm cord if the anchor is well equalized. |
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If the cord you are describing has the rating that you state, there should be no reason to believe it would not be adequate for a top rope anchor. |
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I think his data showed the forces on the anchor, climber, and belayer were far below 15kN. |
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Thanks for the replies- |
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The statement that cord is static or dynamic is generally relative to your definition of what's dynamic or not.. |
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Dylan - |
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A couple interesting articles from the UIAA about the impact of abrasion on ropes: |
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akscrambler wrote: I always think about a slackline, where your angle is nearly 180 (forces on the anchor approach infinity), and you're girth hitched to a tree several feet up the trunk (lots of leverage); you can bounce your full body weight on it repeatedly, and everything is fine.You may want to consider that everything is fine because the forces on the anchors, in fact, don't approach infinity...if they did, the anchor would necessarily fail. |
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Max Forbes wrote:The statement that cord is static or dynamic is generally relative to your definition of what's dynamic or not.. Generally, all nylon cords are dynamic, and will stretch between 8-15% at 100lbf, where polyester and dyneema/spectra cords will only stretch 1-5% under an equal load.Yep. Polyester doesn't absorb water and it doesn't stretch. Nylon absorbs 44% of its weight in water and it does stretch. All nylon is technically dynamic, but not truly dynamic in the sense we talk about dynamic climbing ropes. That little stretch will reduce impact forces, however, vs Titan cord or polyester cord. |
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Xam wrote: You may want to consider that everything is fine because the forces on the anchors, in fact, don't approach infinity...if they did, the anchor would necessarily fail.Obviously. I'm just saying that you're applying the worst force multiplication possible. |
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Would assume cyclic loading upon a single strand of the anchor is more relevant in a TR setup than the breaking force possible in a fall. |
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edennis wrote:Here's another one- Would you use 8mm accessory cord with a strength rating of 15.6kn for a top rope anchor not doubled up- single strand on each leg?Top-rope? Sure. Even if I take a 50% strength loss on each leg, and I get minimal load distribution, a TR fall isn't going to approach that. As others noted, have to watch out for sharp edges, sawing action, etc. But that's always a good idea. |
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A 8mm static cord will hold a factor 2 fall as a lanyard even with an alpine butterfly in the middle ;) |