The finer points of placing Camp Tricams in their active postion
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One of the recent Tricam threads made me wonder if I'm limiting myself in what size parallel sided cracks I can safely set a single size Camp Tricam in it's active position. |
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In my experience the dimple, lip, crystal etc... is critical for a good placement, regardless of horizontal/vertical. In a perfectly parallel crack, the best approach is to use a cam. Alot of these placement ideas originate before Friends came out. Tricams excel in narrow pods or flared horizontals, as long as there is a dimple to catch the fulcrum point. Since they are so fiddly I would never consider making a marginal placement where a cam would work perfectly, especially if free climbing. |
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Contrary to what some folks believed years ago, in a horizontal crack, it doesn't matter whether the piece is placed "rails up" or "rails down". What IS critical is that there is something to hold the point. IME that's why these are so popular at the Gunks - the cracks have pebbles and dimples that make Tricam placements especially secure. Notice in the photo below that the upper surface of the crack it rather featureless, while the rock on the bottom is full of pebbles. Hence the placements are point down. |
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Well then, these are not the answers I expected at all, but certainly interesting. I could see the dimple, lip, crystal as being critical if the fulcrum point was tipped forward out of the crack or backwards, but straight down into the crack has always seemed solid for me weighting and bounce testing it on the ground. And I've fallen on a pink 0.5 in just that configuration with nothing in front of the fulcrum point that held quite nicely. |
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If nothing else fits but a tricam in a parallel crack with nothing to hold the fulcrum I think I'll just keep climbing. |
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So far all three commenter's feel having some sort of small obstruction in front of the fulcrum point is necessary for a solid Tricam placement in it's active position. What has led you to this conclusion? |
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Oh boy...here we go again, lol. |
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Ted Pinson wrote:Oh boy...here we go again, lol. Cams are bomber at Devil's Lake, and people fall on them all the time. We have speculated to the end of time about why this is the case, but contrary to popular opinion, cams hold just fine at the lake. If cams are in any way ineffective there, it is because of the lack of plentiful truly parallel cracks, not due to a lack of friction.Yeah yeah, they hold fine most of the time. That doesn't change the fact that DL quartzite can best be described as a glassy substance smeared with crisco, which means that cams have a much higher probability of slipping and sliding than on God's Chosen Rock (otherwise known as granite). I have personally witnessed cams (in particular TCUs) sliding around in parallel DL cracks just from rope movement. Does that necessarily mean the cam will fail? No. But it does mean that you need to be much more careful that the cam doesn't skate itself into a bad orientation. On granite on the other hand, you can usually 'set' the cam and it won't walk at all. Saying that DL cam placements don't suffer because of a lack of friction is not a solid argument. A nut in DL rock on the other hand when properly set will hold the weight of a small planet. And a Tricam can be similarly truck. Thus I would always prefer a Tricam or nut to a cam on DL glass...er, I mean rock. |
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If we can get everyone in forums to stop referring to the fulcrum point as the stinger everything else will sort itself out. |
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Gunkiemike wrote:Contrary to what some folks believed years ago, in a horizontal crack, it doesn't matter whether the piece is placed "rails up" or "rails down".I'd disagree with this comment. Although the rails up or rails down doesn't matter for the bite of the tricam, I think it still is better to have the rails up in a horizontal placement. This keeps your sling resting on the lip of the crack at a less sharp angle instead of bending 90 degrees over thereby reducing wear and tear. As for the original question, I generally am fine placing tricams up to the point where the contact point on the rail is just short of where the pin is. I do concur that finding a hollow for the nose the tricam is good for getting a good placement. If I don't have that slight hollow then I tend to not place tricams in an otherwise splitter vertical crack. A splitter horizontal will hold the tricam just fine especially in the smaller sizes. The larger sizes sometimes have a tendency to tip over sideways if pulled funny and they aren't set or have something holding the nose. I'd argue that tricams are most useful for pod shaped cracks where a normal cam that fits the front doesn't cam wide enough for the center of the pod, and for horizontal cracks. If you allow the tricam to rotate all the way up to basically the pin on the rail side then it gives a much bigger range I find than an equivalent cam. |
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One thing i've noticed with tricams in horizontals is that they set much better the less "retracted" they are, especially in the larger sizes, and are more stable. On the other hand, if you're climbing on choss, you may choose to place tri-cams more "retracted" as this gives more distance for the crack to expand/flex/break without the tricam pulling out. |
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Alex James wrote: I'd disagree with this comment. Although the rails up or rails down doesn't matter for the bite of the tricam, I think it still is better to have the rails up in a horizontal placement. This keeps your sling resting on the lip of the crack at a less sharp angle instead of bending 90 degrees over thereby reducing wear and tear.I would agree 100% from experience here. I know they will set either way but I have had to retire one from placing it rails down 1 time due to damage to the sling. Always go rails up unless you have no other choice in how to place it if the rock is sharp at all. If it is a slopper edge it probably doesn't matter much at all. |
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"If we can get everyone in forums to stop referring to the fulcrum point as the stinger everything else will sort itself out." |
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I've finally been able to get out and ground place, weight, and bounce test tricams this week. What I found is that I've been seriously under utilizing my Tricams in the active position. In addition, placing one in a parallel sided crack with no rugosity or feature in front of the fulcrum point works fine and holds no problem with vigorous and repeated bounce testing with the fulcrum point at a ninety degree angle to the walls of the crack to tilted somewhat away/back from the direction of pull. All other active positions such as, fulcrum point tilted forward towards the direction of pull, and fulcrum point and cam shoulders touching one side of the wall with the stingers touching the other require at the least a slight to large dimple, bump, or lip of rock in front of the fulcrum point. And that little bit of rock needs to be solid. Don't just take my word for it, go out and do this yourself and you might change your mind about how you place them. It really helps build trust in the gear placements to see them hold so well. And you won't get this from just placing them while climbing, unless you are aiding. It's amazing the weird and strange features tricams will fit into in their active and passive positions, in addition to standard parallel sided cracks. Where I ground place there is not a lot of classic and super obvious constrictions that fit nuts well, but tricams work really well there. That being said, please keep an eye on where the slings are when you weight and bounce test them. I accidentally sawed through about 1/4 of the width of the carabiner loop part of the tricam sling. That piece is now retired. Always inspect your gear. |
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Tricams in a true parallel crack may hold a bounce test but you don't really want to climb past it. If there aren't any features to keep the tricam secure in its original placement then it is suspect once you move past it. One of the issues with using aid climbing to "test" your placements is that bounce tests may deceive you into trusting a bad placement that manages to hold body weight. The real value in aid climbing is simply to get a lot of experience and mileage with the "art" of placing gear. It may also force creativity which will further help you learn. Don't over-estimate the quality of your gear. That is one mistake that you may not live to learn from. Back to the OP, one thing I've come to learn about tri-cams is that most of the time you're better off placing a tricam in active mode in constrictions unless the geometry of the crack really matches the geometry of the tricam. Because tricams don't have the curve that most nuts do, they tend to be less secure than nuts when used as a chock |
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Eli, Thank you for your input and warning. I'll keep that in mind, but I'm not sure that I agree with you. I only have a few falls on trad lead, and the last one was exactly this scenario you warn about and it held. It's in my first post on this thread. Maybe that's luck on my part, but I went into this whole trad leading having done a lot of testing of pieces on the ground for my own piece of mind and education. This to me was part of not over estimating the quality of my gear placements. My experience with these few real lead falls, and ground placing, weighting, and bounce testing is that the latter is seemingly far harder on the gear than the former. There is no give of a dynamic rope and belayer. The person is bouncing on static nylon, or perhaps dyneema depending on what people are using to step into and what type of sling is on the gear and you get several hard bounces as opposed to one softened bounce on a lead fall. I have some wired passive gear that has a colored rubber sheath on the carabiner loop. One I took an accidental real fall on as the first piece and it barely bent the wire carabiner loop and left the colored rubber sheath intact and undamaged. These other sizes of the same pieces that I ground placed, weighted, and bounce tested severely bent the wire carabiner loop and completely chewed through the colored rubber sheath covering it the first time I did this with them. This seems to imply to me that weighting and bounce testing the piece several times is a much harder force than most real lead falls. I do though also get the impression that you are also talking about how well the piece sets in the rock regarding the geometry of rock. And yes, I'd agree with you there. If the Tricam doesn't set hard and stay put in it's position, it's not to be trusted, and if you have a choice, not used in that position and/or location. Having a piece rattle loose and completely walk out, or walk into a bad placement is not a good feeling at all and could be dangerous. This is though what most climbers should know of to not make blind placements and make sure the piece has full contact to the rock. I find if I question the setting of the Tricam, removing it will give me some idea of how hard it's set in there and if it will stay in that position, depending on what I find, I can either place it again in the same area and position, or choose something else more secure. I also note that Camp does say in their manual that the rugosity is not absolutely necessary. It's unfortunately a little too vague, but I'd only agree with that with the Tricam in the active postion in a parallel walled crack with the fulcrum point at ninety degrees to the wall, or pointed slightly away from the direction of pull. All other placements need a constriction or rugosity in front of the fulcrum point. I would think for a company that likes to have lot's of paperwork attached to each product and that could be held liable for what they say in their manual about how to use them that they'd be super careful about what they recommend. |
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anotherclimber wrote: |
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Xam wrote: To add to his post: The reason that bounce testing and aiding wears down more on gear is because of the quantity and frequency of loading. Many trad climbers rarely fail on their gear so a particular piece may only actually be loaded once every few months or perhaps even less than that. On the other hand, if you give something a good bounce test, it's loaded 2 or 3 times and more of you place it again |
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Another thing to think about with horizontal placements, fulcrum up or down. The rope can walk the tricam out of it's placement. When the sling is down, and the fulcrum is up, the tricam might drop down away from the rock and slip out of the horizontal because the fulcrum won't re-engage. If the fulcrum is down when it walks, the friction can cause the tricam to re-engage with the rock. It might be best to say that fulcrum down is ideal unless the tricam fits better fulcrum up, and then make sure you set and extend the piece so it won't walk. |
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anotherclimber wrote: To me, that statement is like telling someone that's it's not absolutely necessary to buckle the strap of your helmet. It MAY be able deflect a rock coming straight down at the center-top of the helmet, but in reality it will do its job more reliably if the strap is always buckled. |
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When tri cams 1st came out I got rid of my Hexes, when I realized that the evolve tri cams had relatively the same taper as the larger stoppers I was carrying, I got rid of the stoppers. Amazingly versatile they will fit where nothing else will, and more often then not they will fit with the reassuring sound of them "setting" into place. They can be set quickly but often are not the quick fix you hope a cam will be. The more versatility in your rack the better. |