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Originally posted by NickfromWI
I'd like that Petzl steel biner much more if it had a no-snag tip. It's hard to find steel no-snag biners.
SRT, carabiners of steel or alloy HAVE to be able to put up with being used to throw a rope over a limb. There is such a tiny abuse involved in throwing the rope over. It's equivalent to dropping the carabiner to the ground when you're standing on the ground. They can't be that delicate. Any manufacturer would be stupid to make climbing equipment THAT delicate.
I know window washers, tower workers, etc are not that careful with their equipment.
love
nick
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Originally posted by SRT-Tech
Biners are not designed to be used as a throw weight!! and this is something that i CONTINUALLY see in treeclimbing, be it Rec or Pro.....gear that is used wrong, abused or used for something OTHER than its INTENDED purpose.
Treeclimbing is NO different than any other rope access area. Simply put, ropes (just like other rope access fields) are used to access an area of the tree. (just another medium, like rock, steel, tower etc)
WHY THEN, do treeclimbers insist on abusing their gear, not caring for their ropes, climbing on dirty ropes, storing their ropes wet, using carabiners for uses other than the intended use etc etc etc etc?????????? Why do treeclimbers not follow BASIC rules and procedures for gear care and use? its YOUR life, why jeapordize it by not maintaining your gear, by abusing your gear, and by not caring for your gear?
about a dozen or so Rope Access techs i used to work with, have been following this forum and other forums related to treeclimbing, and have commented on the apparent lack of basic knowledge in rope skills,namely the use and care of gear or the basic understanding of what you do or don't do with your gear.
i'm not singling out anyone here or any forum in particular, but there is a real need for treeclimbers (any/all) to come up to par with the rest of the rope access world, in terms of basic do's / don'ts related to our gear.
There is pushing the boundaries in terms of new techniques or gear, then there is abuse of your LIFE SUPPORT gear. Choose one.
So, should the old adage "trees don't grow to heaven" be proved false,Neither the steel used in carabiners or the aluminum alloys are subject to micro-cracking. There may be over-heat treated steel or titanium alloys that exhibit it, but the theory of micro-cracking only came up when they started using fancy ceramics for jet engine turbines.
You can drop your carabiners thousands of feet onto granite, and if they still open and close smoothly, they are fine to use. If you feel uncomfortable with this advice, then go ahead and retire them, or send them to me.
Can I prove this? There is an engineering argument - aluminum alloys (might be exceptions, but 7075-T6 is not one of them) and ordinary steel alloys (as used in carabiners) are not the type of material that exhibits micro-cracking. There is an evidence argument - while working at Black Diamond for 12 years, we NEVER saw a carabiner that exhibited any form of micro-cracking or loss of strength from being dropped (while still functional), including quite a few dropped the full height of El Cap (3000 feet). But no, I cannot PROVE that all biners over all time will never exhibit loss of strength.
And just to cover all the bases, carabiners dropped from outer space, on re-entry, will heat up substantially which will screw up the heat treating. There will likely be ablation of material off the outside also, so I advise against using biners that are dropped from outer space. Those should definitely be retired.
Perhaps Brian knows of some examples of hidden micro-cracking in conventional alloys.
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Tell me, whaTHEck is "over 100_000 rope rescue techs" denoting?Originally posted by SRT-Tech
i guess over a 100,000 rope rescue techs are wrong then......standard protocol is to destroy gear (specifically carabiners) that is dropped any distancemore than a few feet.
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No, a few tests would likely not suffice.based on tests that someone may have done, on a dropped biner.
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