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moss wrote: For myself, I would not be happy using a toothed ascender on 9mm. In a shock load scenario, say a partial blowout on your TIP (this is not a rare occurrence), the cover will strip and you'll be hanging on the core wondering what to do next. Hopefully you wore diapers and are highly skilled at self-rescue off a stripped cover kernmantle rope!
-AJ
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Tree-D wrote: I'll take a stab at translating, because I think Moss said a lot of excellent stuff there!
Toothed ascenders are those mechanical devices you guys are using to climb SRT. They have a cam which pinches the rope, and the cam has angled teeth on it, so you can slide the ascender up, but it holds if you pull it down. The Petzl ascenders that I see folks using in many pictures have very sharp teeth. These were originally designed to bite through ice and into frozen ropes.
A shock load would be a situation where you take a fall which is stopped by your ascender grabbing the rope.
TIP (Tie In Point) is your anchor: the branch your rope passes over.
A partial blowout would be the following: your SRT rope goes over a number of branches. The upper-most branch breaks (blows out) and you fall until your rope lands on the next branch down. (Partial blow out. Followed by... you guessed it... shock load, as your rope stops you from falling.)
Remember those sharp teeth I mentioned?
Well, now those teeth bite into your rope, and Moss is saying they could actually cut the rope! Considering climbing ropes are actually two ropes, one inside the other (the core and the cover), he is saying that if you are lucky, you will only cut through the cover, leaving you hanging on the core. Maybe you're used to looking at a pretty color pattern on your rope, but all of a sudden you are looking at 12" of rope that has been stripped down to the bright-white core.
If the fall didn't scare you bad enough to crap your pants, the sight of that bare core will! (Or should!) Thus... the diapers.
If you're alone in the tree, do you know how to get down when you've got all that frayed and bunched-up cover in your way and it is also jammed into your ascender? If you have a buddy with you, do they know how to rescue you?
Anyway, I believe Moss is suggesting that this scenario is less likely on fatter ropes which have thicker cores and thicker covers.
New climbers like to get on the cutting edge, but are you sure you know the margins of safety and appropriate fallback plans? I'm not trying to give you a hard time, I'm just a huge pessimist who is worried about the safety of all my climbing buddies out there! I vote for attending climbing classes (basic climbing AND rescue classes) instead of attending the school of YouTube and hard knocks.
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Tree-D wrote: my favorite SRT arial choke is when my rope chokes the whole trunk of the tree
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