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« Last post by tomtom on May 13, 2024, 08:04:42 pm »
Wheel bearings rarely fail together - so normally you can hear it from (in your case) either rear near side or off side. Have a drive with the rear seats down which can make noises from the back clearer..
Reducing when deaccelerating in neutral does make me wonder if it’s a diff issue (especially if it seems to come from neither near or offside wheel).
Once it’s in a ramp or jacked up (either at home or at garage) you’ll find out easily enough. Spinning a wheel with a duff wheel bearing makes all sorts of not good noises (the ones that turn into a whine when at speed).
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« Last post by edshakey on May 13, 2024, 07:43:23 pm »
Shawn Rabatou also climbed Story of three Worlds twice in a session becuase he dabbed on the a tree the first time he climbed it.
So he just climbed it once then
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« Last post by andy popp on May 13, 2024, 07:30:28 pm »
Would be really nice to have some context to that. Anyone have a video of it?
Context would really be just Trump's normal rally performance: free association, digression, bragging, lying, and incoherence. It doesn't need to make any sense. I actually know (through family) someone who was there - they have a condo in the town. All the Jersey shore beach towns are very white, but Wildwood is also pretty rednecky, and very Trumpy (in a pretty solidly Democratic state).
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First person to climb V15 twice in a day (half day?).
Scratch that, actually been done a few times! Not many times though..
Ondra Fa'd two 8C's and an 8B in a day back a couple years back. https://www.instagram.com/p/B44J_8YJq0Q/?utm_source=ig_embed Shawn Rabatou also climbed Story of three Worlds twice in a session becuase he dabbed on the a tree the first time he climbed it.
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« Last post by andy popp on May 13, 2024, 06:34:07 pm »
This is also all rather abstract when we actually use grades in context. Even if we simply have a picture with a line drawn on it and no description, when we are actually stood beneath a crag we take in a range of visual clues that help us make sense of a combination of letters and numbers on the page: does the rock look solid; does it look compact and hard to protect; how tall is the cliff; how steep; are the lines obvious or hard to read, etc. etc. Of course, having a guide book description adds even more information.
Ah, well that's all good as long as you are using grades for their primary purpose: to give information on difficulty to the aspirant ascentionist.
Silly me!
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« Last post by SA Chris on May 13, 2024, 06:33:16 pm »
First person to climb V15 twice in a day (half day?).
Scratch that, actually been done a few times! Not many times though..
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« Last post by andy moles on May 13, 2024, 06:02:37 pm »
Bit of an absurd comparison to make, was what I was getting at. At least apples and oranges are both similarly-sized spherical fruit.
Apologies, re-reading your post I agree with the general point. Though my impression is that hard E-grades are not always graded for the hypothetical on-sight attempt - listening to what various people climbing those routes have said or written, it doesn't always seem to be a consideration. In Dave Mac's recent-ish video on how he grades routes, for example, he didn't even touch on it.
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« Last post by monkoffunk on May 13, 2024, 05:58:10 pm »
M - Yoga T - Yoga W - Yoga T - 5k run. Been a little lax about keeping this regular. First in just under a month. Felt so good in evening after. F - Elbow physio exercises. Yoga. S - Nothing. S - Yoga
Basically a rest week. Not sure when I’ll get chance to get out again, but hopefully do some more training this week.
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« Last post by Tom de Gay on May 13, 2024, 05:37:24 pm »
Bit of an absurd comparison to make, was what I was getting at. At least apples and oranges are both similarly-sized spherical fruit.
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« Last post by Oldmanmatt on May 13, 2024, 05:35:59 pm »
I am certain, that (barring some undisclosed mental health issues) the writers of the new season of Dr Who, are on Acid.
Still, made me smile.
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