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Gear Vorstellung mit Notch Flow Adjust mit Fusion Rope Wrench Tether als Combo - Geocaching T5

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Alex

Alex

Күн бұрын

Hier hab ich für euch eine kleine Vorstellung vom eingesetzten Material beim T5 Geocaching. Da ich keine Videos zum Notch Flow Rope Wrench Fusion Tether Combo gesehen habe, wollte ich euch mal ein kurzes Video dazu zeigen. Als Prusik habe ich den Notch Wrap Star 8,1 mm x 71,1 mm eye-n-eye Cord mit einem Michoacán Bremsknoten verwendet. Als Seil wurde ein Petzl Axis 11 mm halb statisches Seil verwendet. Im Video ist gut zu erkennen, dass der Knoten während der Abfahrt auch gut beißt und man zum stehen kommt sobald man den Prusik los lässt.
Dies ist mein erstes Video zum Thema Klettern am Baum. Gerne könnt ihr mich in den Kommentaren verbessern oder auch einfach Fragen stellen.
Grüße aus dem Schwabenländle.

Пікірлер: 12
@annahafner4794
@annahafner4794 Ай бұрын
Super mutig
@TredasTaurin
@TredasTaurin Ай бұрын
@@annahafner4794 Danke, das war es! 👍
@Max-oe1je
@Max-oe1je Ай бұрын
Super Video! Erklärung war auch Top, gerne mehr videos.
@TredasTaurin
@TredasTaurin Ай бұрын
@@Max-oe1je Danke für deinen Kommentar. Ein paar Ideen hab ich auch schon. Die warten leider nur noch auf die Umsetzung.
@annahafner4794
@annahafner4794 Ай бұрын
Herr spricht: Ich lasse dich nicht fallen und lasse dich nicht im Stich
@verticalfeel
@verticalfeel Ай бұрын
I'm your new subscriber Alex👍👍🙋 I love those trees, keep climbing
@TredasTaurin
@TredasTaurin Ай бұрын
Thank you, I will. 👏🙋‍♂️
@Knot-orious
@Knot-orious Ай бұрын
Great job! I have no idea what you said except for a few words that are the same in English as in German, but it was nevertheless fun to see one of my loyal subscribers in action! Looks like you’re still getting comfortable with descending on a friction hitch-based system, but I have no doubt that you’ll get better and better at it quickly and fall in love with your rope wrench (if you haven't already)! The only constructive criticism that I have to offer is that you should always remove your chest harness from your device at the top of your ascent, before you descend. This is because, should something go wrong, you don’t want that accessory carabiner preventing you from having as much mobility as possible so that you can take swift action to help yourself. Having your chest harness remain connected could potentially prevent you from quickly grabbing onto a nearby limb, or from quickly reaching to place your lanyard over another limb, etc. In an emergency situation, you want all of your mobility to be available. So you should only ever have your device connected to your chest harness while you are actively ascending. Actually, I might have a few more criticisms and, before you read them, please don’t think I’m picking on you! I’m just trying to help you! Was your primary climbing rope connected using a canopy anchor? It was hard to tell. If it was, then there’s a problem. If you got injured, went into shock, panicked, went unconscious,etc. all of your weight would be on the canopy anchor and, since anyone rescuing you would have no access to the canopy anchor from the ground, it would be impossible to cut it off so that the secondary line would not be able to be used to lower you. Do you understand what I’m saying? And even if someone were to get up to your canopy anchor and cut it somehow, because your fall arrest device on your back up would be hanging a foot or two below where you are tied into your rope, and because it wouldn’t be engaged, your unconscious body would have to take a factor 2 fall onto your fall arrest device and hope it catches. That would make an already dangerous situation even more dangerous. The proper way to use a lowerable basal anchor is to have your primary climb line going through the lowering device at the anchor. That way, if there’s an emergency, all someone has to do is undo the alpine butterfly and lower you to the ground. Obviously, if someone were to be in shock or go unconscious and they were still tied into the tree with their lanyard, the lowerable anchor would be useless until another climber can ascend on your second line and cut your lanyard. Then they could lower you. So yeah, always put the lowerable basal anchor on your primary climb line. Then, for your secondary line, simply create a normal basal anchor or canopy anchor. It can be in the same tree or a nearby tree to add redundancy; so that you have two TIP (tie in points). I hope this makes sense. I’m not trying to give you a hard time, I’m trying to keep you safe and offer some free advice. Even if you weren’t using a canopy anchor, and were actually using a basal anchor on your primary line (although, it definitely didn’t look that way; but I could be wrong) the fact still remains that the lowerable basal anchor has to be on your primary climb line because that will be the rope which will be loaded in every emergency that doesn’t involve your primary line getting cut or your climbing device failing catastrophically. Finally, it’s common practice among professional tree climbers to clip the loop of the alpine butterfly to the standing end of the rope, above the lowering device in a lowerable basal anchor. It’s just an extra safety measure. Does that make sense? Just take a carabiner and clip the alpine butterfly to the strand exiting the top of the lowering device. It may sound unnecessary, but it’s the standard among professionals. Alrighty, well, having said all that, congratulations on your new rope wrench and I hope you will continue to make more tree climbing content! I’d love to see more of your climbs! You have a lot of nice looking equipment, so you have all of the tools you need to excel as a tree climber. The simple fact that you can even climb this technically is something to be proud of and it’s impressive. What you are doing isn’t amateur stuff; you’re moving up there with the big boys now! Keep it up! You’re doing great! =-D EDIT: You could also make both anchors lowerable, but that's a bit excessive.
@TredasTaurin
@TredasTaurin Ай бұрын
@@Knot-orious Thank you for your very detailed comment. I will now read it in detail. You saw it correctly. My climbing rope was attached to a canopy anchor with a ring to ring friction saver. Only the orange rope with the fall arrest device had a lower able basal anchor. It's already late here today. Thank you very much
@Knot-orious
@Knot-orious Ай бұрын
@@TredasTaurin Please don't think I'm being a "know it all." You can climb however you want. You clearly have a lot of experience. I'm just giving you suggestions based off of what I've learned. Maybe you learned differently.
@johrudi87
@johrudi87 Ай бұрын
👍🫡
@TredasTaurin
@TredasTaurin Ай бұрын
Danke für dein Interesse 👍
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