Ideal indoor grading system??

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Something that makes sense, or something that doesn't??


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Fiend

Whut
Joined
Mar 4, 2004
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13,753
Inspired by the new system* at The Boardroom (where despite this, the climbing was fun and the ceiling fans excellent)...

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In voting for the objectively correct answer, it might be useful to consider that whilst outdoor grades aren't very comparable to indoors, they are better than having no comparison at all; and most walls use outdoor-derived grades which makes for better for wall-to-wall comparisons; and almost all walls have grade spreads in the circuits e.g. V2-4, V3-5, which already take into account the poor comparison with outdoors.



(* quite possibly somehow related to the god awful indoor wall portrait cam selfie wooden stand things)
 
Ditch grades indoors. They don't make sense. If you have eight coloured circuits just rank them in order of general difficulty and don't even bother grading them
 
I somewhat disagree with this. While they don't always match perfectly to outdoors it can be useful to have something that allows an imperfect comparison. If someone can only do v4 indoors then they probably don't want to go to a crag where the easiest thing is v6. If they can climb the blues then who knows if a crag is suitable or not.

That being said some walls grade spread is a bit wild. For example I've seen the hard circuit at a wall be v5-10 which spans a huge range.
 
If a wall is setting circuits (and most do) then the rough grade range of the circuit is probably best; V or font, I don’t care. I always liked the system used at Climb Newcastle (and likely others) of a grade range and also a little diagram indicating which are high in the grade band and which are low: this stops you accidentally trying to warm up on the crux.

The big issue I’d have with the system shown is that as a first time visitor I’d have no indication of what problems I should be trying, and as such would probably waste my first ( perhaps only) visit trying to find which circuit is of the correct difficulty for me.

Surely the whole point of grading boulder problems is to give the climber some indication of the difficulty they will encounter. Granted some will use it for bragging on social media, others will whine when they go outside and get their arse handed to them when they were climbing V - whatever down the wall. But it is a system that works really rather well.
 
Wellsy said:
Ditch grades indoors. They don't make sense. If you have eight coloured circuits just rank them in order of general difficulty and don't even bother grading them

This for larger bouldering centres. our local wall has a relatively small bouldering area though, so V or font for each prob makes sense.

I sometimes take a higher grade if i find it hard though ;)
 
I think that using something else than FB grades for Bouldering and French grades for the lead wall is ludicrous. On one hand you have a system that has been perfected through more than one hundred years of climbing history, on the other hand you have a bunch of colours with arbitrarily width.

I understand perfectly well why setters do not want to set an exact font grade to a problem as they don't get payed to climb the problems and they have just tried one or two individual moves with guide tennies on their feet, so guessing a grade is hard. Also the amount of entitled noobs in climbing has just exploded past what is imaginable. Nowadays there a noobs who climb 9b! (Noob = someone who prefer routes where draws are already hanging = someone who think that they subjective experience of the difficulty of a route has high value = someone who has glaring movement deficiency on a major style of climbing). But if there is one strenght noobs have, it is to whine to the route setters about grades.

But as a consumer I demand grades on the problems. More precision is always better than less. If the route setter made a mistake and the 8b is actually an 8a, well that is not a big deal. If I am asked to find an appropriate route that is around 8a and one colour spans 7a to 8b and the next 8a to 9a, well I am in a fucking pickle, am I not?
 
I think to have an opinion on this thread you need to have worked in a wall/as a setter for a minimum of 100+ hours and be on the receiving end of the endless crap from members of the public regarding the grades. Suddenly, L1, L2 etc starts to make perfect sense.
 
I climbed well over a year on a climbing wall that had no grading at all, just relative color scale (actually not that uncommon), an interesting experience, I wondered what my level might be (V grade wise), however looking back, it didn't really matter much, as long as I know I am getting stronger objectively, it is all that matters, and I quite liked it.
 
Dexter said:
If someone can only do v4 indoors then they probably don't want to go to a crag where the easiest thing is v6.

Especially as they’ll probably struggle on v2s.

I once climbed at Parisella’s and one of a group of Sheffield climbers there kept having to be told which L grade the problems there would get if they were on the Foundry Wave as that was the only grading scale they understood. :lol:

My opinion, and one I’ve shared on here numerous times, is that trying to relate indoor grades to rock climbing ones (or even those at other walls) is the path to madness and the best walls are the ones that use a proprietary grading system.
 
jwi said:
More precision is always better than less. If the route setter made a mistake and the 8b is actually an 8a, well that is not a big deal.

Might not be a big deal to you but its the biggest deal in the world to like 9 out of 10 climbers at the wall
 
The big thing is just getting things in the right order. I don't mind if I need to add or take off 2 grades at a wall or on a board, but that needs to be at least roughly consistent
 
abarro81 said:
The big thing is just getting things in the right order. I don't mind if I need to add or take off 2 grades at a wall or on a board, but that needs to be at least roughly consistent

I totally agree with this. Some walls are known to be soft and some massive sandbags. But as long as it is consistent you can easily adjust.
 
joel182 said:
jwi said:
More precision is always better than less. If the route setter made a mistake and the 8b is actually an 8a, well that is not a big deal.

Might not be a big deal to you but its the biggest deal in the world to like 9 out of 10 climbers at the wall

Yeez, where do you train? The wall I'm going to, 9 out of 10 climbers are nowhere near being able to do the 8s, even though the grades are quite generous.
 
jwi said:
joel182 said:
jwi said:
More precision is always better than less. If the route setter made a mistake and the 8b is actually an 8a, well that is not a big deal.

Might not be a big deal to you but its the biggest deal in the world to like 9 out of 10 climbers at the wall

Yeez, where do you train? The wall I'm going to, 9 out of 10 climbers are nowhere near being able to do the 8s, even though the grades are quite generous.

It's not so much about the absolute grades, but the V6 that's actually a V5 will be the most climbed boulder on any set, and the V4 that's actually a V5 will hardly get touched
 
Ideal for who?

As a punter I would like exact and perfectly accurate (Font) grades for every problem, plus general circuit colours (e.g. all 6A-6B yellow) so you can easily spot from a distance what is what.

As a setter I would want no grades or colours for anything!
 
Paul B said:
I think to have an opinion on this thread you need to have worked in a wall/as a setter for a minimum of 100+ hours and be on the receiving end of the endless crap from members of the public regarding the grades. Suddenly, L1, L2 etc starts to make perfect sense.
FWIW the Boardroom staff seemed very amenable when I politely told them that the arbitrary root vegetable non-grade thing was the worst idea in the history of bad ideas (whilst praising the setting, the ceiling fans, and the amount of fun I had despite the grades).

Anyway, that's what grade ranges are for - V3-5, which (or it's Font equivalent) is the only sensible "don't fuck with what actually works" solution - heading off any possible endless crap because the range is broad enough to fit any sort of error in (whilst fooling the public that it's semi-accurate so they assume it's all about V4 but then if it's a path or desperate it can be shrugged off as soft V3 or nails V5...).
 
Fiend said:
FWIW the Boardroom staff seemed very amenable when I politely told them that the arbitrary root vegetable non-grade thing was the worst idea in the history of bad ideas (whilst praising the setting, the ceiling fans, and the amount of fun I had despite the grades).

I quite enjoyed the linear A-H scale to be fair. It kind of recognises the massive disconnect between indoor and outdoor bouldering - ratty crimps, weird smears, poor coffee selection, choice of equally poor footholds, bad landings, lack of parkour - that the change to 'this is likely a bit harder than this' scale worked well.

I went all in and tried a dumb challenge - 50+ problems in an hour and a bit - without the little voice saying 'that was hard for V3'. Best session I've had in a while.
 
I initially would have said that the classic few grade spread was obviously the most sensible (font or V). But then I realised I don’t actually use the grade spread beyond an initial idea of roughly which colours should be warm-ups and which colours ones will be good challenges. Then I just start saying ‘ooof hard for a red etc’. And for walls I know I just get on the circuits that suit a session without thinking about grades at all. But then I’m mostly an outdoors/home board climber who sometimes goes to the wall.

Grades work badly enough outside so I suspect it’s a fool’s errand expecting them to behave indoors.
 
abarro81 said:
The big thing is just getting things in the right order. I don't mind if I need to add or take off 2 grades at a wall or on a board, but that needs to be at least roughly consistent

Not just in the right order, but I'd echo jwi's call for at least a reasonable degree of accuracy (within relatively wide bands) as to how hard the problems actually are.

I went to the Armley Depot yesterday and found the yellows to be a long, long way from the stated V7-V8. I tried one that I'm sure is actually somewhere around V11 or even V12. Having hard problems is of course a great thing but it seems bizarre to set a circuit claiming to provide for a V7/8 audience when the problems are anything but.
 

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