Quote from: north_country_boy on July 15, 2011, 03:24:27 pm(I stripped the old draws from Mandela last year, which were then tested to destruction at Wild Country, I suspect that if anyone saw what the seemingly new looking (been up there 2years?) Dyneeema and Nylon tapes broke at they would think again before ever clipping an insitu draw.....)... any specific info on this?At what force did they break?
(I stripped the old draws from Mandela last year, which were then tested to destruction at Wild Country, I suspect that if anyone saw what the seemingly new looking (been up there 2years?) Dyneeema and Nylon tapes broke at they would think again before ever clipping an insitu draw.....)
Quote from: rodma on July 15, 2011, 02:51:34 pm(I stripped the old draws from Mandela last year, which were then tested to destruction at Wild Country, I suspect that if anyone saw what the seemingly new looking (been up there 2years?) Dyneeema and Nylon tapes broke at they would think again before ever clipping an insitu draw.....)I assume the tapes failed before the crabs? What kn did they go at out of interest.
Messed up quotes, hope you still got that last post Dan.
Quote from: Adam Lincoln on July 15, 2011, 04:37:40 pmMessed up quotes, hope you still got that last post Dan.See previous post. Not sure what they are rated at? Some of the crabs were unbelievable, a few winters of freeze and thaw, bright morning sunlight and constant wetness is not good. Hence my earlier comment regarding Ecstacy.
Perma-draws were not deemed necessary on these routes 5-10 years ago. What's changed?I've done a fair number of the routes mentioned at Kilnsey and don't recall putting the draws in or the removal at the end of the session being a game changer in any way. It's just laziness. Ok it makes flashing/onsighting harder - tough, that's how it alway has been, it is not sufficient justification for the practice.TBH the issue didn't bother me when it was the odd route here and there but it now sounds like things are getting silly and we are as well outlawing the practice BEFORE we have access problems, rather than waiting for them to happen.The point of having single biners on routes is to leave the minimum kit insitu to allow routes to be safely and practically stripped. They are the much lesser of two evils. It is beyond me how anyone can say that one krab is more of an eyesore than 10-20 krabs attached to brightly coloured fabric and dangling in space! Yes some, such as the green one on Snatch are unsightly and I agree ought to go.From a selfish climber point of view it's worth considering that ultimately if we push the perma-draw thing to the point where we are forced to negotiate access on sensitive crags, then we might be put in a position where we have to do without these single biners, which would actually be a major ballache.
Thanks for dissing my opinion that a line of draws is prettier than a single biner, but I still find a line of draws prettier, especially if they're matching. Maybe it's my autistic side that likes a line of them rather than a single one, but I really do think it looks nicer. If it's a minority view that's fine, just thought I'd point out that some (or at least one) find the single biners which do seem to be acceptable just as ugly as equipped routes. (Just to clarify: are the single biners acceptable at the cornice, or should I be taking them out if I do one of the routes with one on?)
A tape will be about 22kn rated. As i am sure you know, the rating will be way over what is actually needed. Maybe Adam Long will be along to share his knowledge on the matter. Adam?
ie that 99.9% (I think?) of a sample will break at more than the rated which is in effect a minimum strength.
Quote from: Johnny Brown on July 15, 2011, 11:04:36 pmie that 99.9% (I think?) of a sample will break at more than the rated which is in effect a minimum strength.As good as 3σ == 99.7300204% of a normal distribution.
i these are the people you invented the drive-thru cash point, after all.....
Quote from: Davo on July 15, 2011, 02:35:17 pmI just haven't seen that it endangers access at Kilnsey...If it did then I would have a problem with draws left in place thereI like that attitude It's incredibly healthy. Probably best to wait until there is a problem, and then spend weeks and years lobbying and grovelling to get access back to normal, rather than just taking your shit home.
I just haven't seen that it endangers access at Kilnsey...If it did then I would have a problem with draws left in place there
Quote from: rodma on July 15, 2011, 02:51:34 pmQuote from: Davo on July 15, 2011, 02:35:17 pmI just haven't seen that it endangers access at Kilnsey...If it did then I would have a problem with draws left in place thereI like that attitude It's incredibly healthy. Probably best to wait until there is a problem, and then spend weeks and years lobbying and grovelling to get access back to normal, rather than just taking your shit home.Rodma: As I have said many times in I my posts I am only looking for one concrete reason that leaving draws in on North Buttress endangers access and then I am willing to change my opinion. Perhaps instead of describing how unhealthy my opinion is, you shoud come up with a concrete reason that it causes a problem at Kilnsey! I assume from your post that you climb regularly at Kilnsey and are aware of current access issues concerning draws left in at North Buttress...As I have said above I understand that at crags where the landowner/manager has stated that they don't like draws being left in then, obviously we should strip the draws as otherwise this would endanger access...Dave
dear arborro, three nine and anyone else who thinks these two are rightas far as i can see this isn't really about whether we personally like draws in routes or not. this is mainly about whether leaving draws in routes will lead to access issues in the future. in my opinion we have strong evidence that it is an issue at nearly every crag in the uk. whether we like draws in routes or not is pretty much irrelevant. scenario a; we leave draws in routes we lose accessscenario b; we take them home along with everything else, we continue to climb at these rocks. making value judgements about what constitutes the biggest eyesore a tunnel or a quickdraw is a load of bollocks as is having the opinion that quickdraws are prettier than single biners. this is pure subjectivity and blatantly an esoteric opinion that will be worth precisely fuck all when somebody (not you because you are blatantly too selfish to get involved in anything remotely useful to the wider climbing community) has to spend months negotiating access that we lost because you really really like leaving the clips in.take your clips home or no more climbing
Whether you think the balance is right between balancing our views against people who watch birds for a laugh or not, it's the most important thing pragmatically.
the situ draws on Mecca.
and looking at what's happened to those people flying in the face of the popular opinion... my my they do get an ass raping.