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Climbing FAQ
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| Leading (Page 1 2) | |
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IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER:
Trusting your life to something you read on the
internet is just plain stupid. Get corroboration from a more reliable
source, use your common sense, don't get yourself killed, and don't come
crying to us if you do.
How much gear should I place? / When should I run it out? [back
to top] [FAQ contents]
From: Ken Cline
Adventure climbing is what the sport was all about years ago, when in
doubt run it out. Fear should make you climb better...
For the benefit of those without common sense: Slogans like "when in
doubt, run it out" sound great but when followed blindly can result in
serious bodily harm or death. Only take dangerous runouts when you are
confident in your ability and experience and willing to accept the
consequences of your actions.
I completely disagree about fear - confidence makes you climb better, not
fear.
From: Ranger Rob
A big part of leading harder lines is the ability to place pro quickly when you have to. You can only do this if you have placed hundreds, or thousands of that particular piece already...you will look up at a crack five feet above you, in the middle of an overhanging wall, and say to youself that the number seven stopper will fit sideways. When the #7 goes in first try...you'll say to yourself "Holy Shit!!" Then you can pull the rest of the crux in confidence, and not hesitate with every movement. What i am trying to say is...place the pieces now, where it doesn't count, so that when it does count, it will be second nature to you.
From: Dave Whitehead
1) Place gear before you need it
2) Place gear when you have a good spot to stop and place it
3) If it will take you more energy to stop and place than it will to keep
moving, keep moving.
4) When you're really freaked grab the cams
5) Try to vary the size and type of gear you place
6) Learn to use all your pieces and not just the easiest ones to place
7) If you can, avoid placing all your gear in the same size range early as
you may need that size later on.
10) When building anchors, take time to do it properly and use more pieces
than you think you need. (3 minimum) Always try to leave somewhere for the
second to join you. Think about how you will belay.
13) Keep looking ahead, think about where you will stop and place before
you get there. That way you'll know how far it is to your next piece and
can judge your placements accordingly.
14) If your afraid to move, stick in another piece.
15) If you don't like a placement change it.
16) If you run out of pieces, climb down and get the ones you've already
used. This may seem crazy, but when I started my rack was very limited and
I would always run out of pieces half way up. So I'd have to climb down
and take out the bottom pieces before I could safely continue.
17) Think about where the fall is going to take you
18) Beware of rope drag. Placing too many pieces, especially on traverses
or zig zagging climbs can be a big problem. Use long runners and place
less pieces if it looks like rope drag will be a problem.
From: Bill Crum
Rule 1: If you're leading near your limit, have your rack organized for
the pitch ahead of you.
Rule 2: Before you go, make sure your belayer is anchored bombproof.
Rule 3: Clip the belay anchor as your first placement to eliminate a
force 2 fall directly onto your belayer's waist.
Rule 4: Place a piece within the first 5 - 8 feet to eliminate the
likelyhood of a force 2 fall onto the belay anchors.
Rule 5: Place gear often enough to eliminate the potential of a ground
fall or ledge fall. This means more gear must be placed in the early part
of a lead than in the mid-to-top part.
Rule 6: When at a good rest, place gear.
Rule 7: Don't be afraid to double gear up below a crux section.
Rule 8: If your gear is solid, trust it and climb!
From: Ilana Stern
1) Check your placements. Tug on stoppers to seat them, wiggle your
cams to make sure they don't walk. Don't just stick 'em in and go
until it becomes second nature to place good stuff.
2) Consider your second. Think about your second's position on
traverses and wandering routes, and protect so that he won't take
a big swing if he falls. Set up your belay stances so he has a place
to clip in immediately.
3) Consider the rope. This is the least obvious and the hardest thing
for a beginning leader, in my experience. It can really mess you up
when you're trying to do hard moves and the rope drag is pulling you
off the rock! Sling pieces appropriately so that the rope runs
smoothly. Try to choose belay stances such that the rope has a place
to go while you belay your second, and that you have room to re-pile
it if you're not swinging leads.
4) Back up historical fixed pro whenever possible. I have a "fixed"
piton from the Yellow Spur sitting on my workstation, that my partner
clipped on lead. When I unclipped the biner from it, the piton wiggled
and came out in my hand.
5) If you get gripped, don't panic. It's not the end of the world
to hang from your gear.
From: Rob Williams
I'd rather have my partner place
too much gear than not enough--unless of course you are running out of
gear.
From: Keith Jewell
Personally, not stopping during a crux is one of the hardest things to
do. Climbing at one's "perceived" limit is where one usually wants gear
the most. I've blown many an onsight by stopping to place from a lousy
position, getting flamed out and almost falling trying to clip, and then
being unable to pull the moves. One thing that really helps, at least
for me, is spotting the next good stance from the present one. Stop,
shake out, and spot that next thank god jug before leaving the good
stance. Then run for it.
From: Dave Kennedy
With clibing on gear, success on hard routes is often based on
your ability to not place gear. This sometimes means that sections
must be run out, or you waste all your stenght hanging on bad holds
placing gear. Moves are no harder, but by choice, one may make the
climbing much harder by placing too much gear.
From: Chris Ferro
Can anybody explain to me the theory behind this sort of protection
placement?
Yeah, you have to balance time and gear with safety. You don't want to use up
all of your gear down low on easy terrain when you might need it higher up on
the hard stuff, and you don't want to spend a lot of time placing tons of gear
unless it is very necessary. And if you place gear well, one piece should be
fine. I always place gear for one main purpose: so I won't hit the ground.
Falling won't hurt you, hitting the ground will. I always try to make sure
that I have a solid piece of protection in that will keep me from hitting the
ground. If I am worried about the piece not holding, then I will back it up.
The bottom line is: you should never plan on falling, and you shouldn't lead
trad that is so hard for you that you are falling all over it. Climb like that
and you'll get hurt. Start easy, learn how to place pro so that every piece is
solid, and work your way up. You have to trust yourself not to fall on easy
stuff, but protect yourself in case a hold breaks, you get stung by a wasp, a
snake bites you, etc...
From: Mike Riches
It's real easy to run out an easy climb. There is always a chance
something could happen, but if you feel comfortable why waste a lot of
time and valuable peices that you might need somewhere else?
Everybody has thier comfort zone, and as long as you're well within
that then what's the problem? These are very personal descisions that
only you can make.
From: John Davis
All sorts of things factor in - how solid is the rock (do you think a 'good'
hold might pop, or you might get sconed by rock fall?), how are you feeling
(ever had one of those days when you just float up routes, or suffered a
'high gravity' day?), do you need to protect the second (traverses), the
list of variables is endless.
Some of this is bravado/self-confidence ("it's only 5.8 - I _never_ fall on
5.8s!") and also some of it is pro coservation (arriving at the crux, only
to realise that you've placed the size pro you need lower down on easy
ground really sucks) and energy/time saving.
sometimes it's impossible to defend against the consequences, the old
adage 'the leader must not fall' still holds true.
From: Tim
Two examples:
One: Was belaying friend on a grade 17 (5.9?) and suddenly saw other friend on a 22
(5.10c?) come off and rip out two pieces of gear and hit the deck (from 10meters
up). This dude is a really good climber, he can climb 24 on natural gear (no bolts)
but somehow he just fell off, he doesnt know what he did. The thing that saved him
was his 3rd peice that didnt rip, but he still hit the ground, though it slowed him
down (not that i noticed that from my view of the situation). He was climbing
within his limits, but cause he didn't place good pro (he new it was manky) he
decked out. And walked away without a scratch. But had he hit the ground at any
other place along the bottom of the cliff his landing would have been sharp rocks,
not sand.
Next example, another friend was climbing a climb called Bard. its a grade 13 and
was within her limits at the time, though 14 was about the limit for leading. She
was cruising along on the second pitch until it started to get really hard. She had
gone off route on to a climb called Checkmate, a grade 17. She then fell and ended
up next to her belayer, but none of her gear ripped.
No matter how easy the climb is, once you fall you are not going to get a second
chance to look that nut placment over, so make it good. The thing is, your gear
placments are there to stop you falling, but they are also there to keep your
belayer safe, you have a responsibility to your belayer. (I know someone who fell,
ripped out 4 cams and landed on her belayer).
From: Jeff Amato
Do not forget the other purpose of placing gear: that sense of
satisfaction that comes from slotting the perfect nut placement,
or even the joy of hex craft. It's a science and an art.
Should I rack on a gear sling or on my harness? / How should I organize my rack? [back
to top] [FAQ contents]
From: John Byrnes
I may be reading this wrong, but it sounds like you're
racking on your harness(?). I don't recommend that unless
you're about to lead something very overhanging. Hanging
gear on your harness has many other drawbacks besides getting
tangled.
I rack using a gear sling on one side, a 1" x 48" sling to
hang the quickdraws on the other, and long slings (48") over
my shoulder so they lay over the draws.
From: Kelly Rich
While some friends of mine go for an all-harness racking method,
I find that it's just too much weight on my hips. Also, there's
rarely enough space on the hip racks to hold enough gear for a long
pitch. So I still use my shoulder gear sling, and this is how it
goes:
All small-sized gear goes on the shoulder sling. Nuts, TCU's,
small cams. This keeps the weight light on my shoulder.
I then rack the big stuff on my hips. I put most of the pro on my
right, but spread a few selections on my left.
I carry slings and draws on both sides, usually on my front
hips, leaving the heavy stuff towards the back. Since I still
have a shoulder gear sling, I can move the rack around if I get
up to a wide crack.
From: Geoff Jennings
I rack almost all my pro on an over the shoulder sling. I have one
of the Metolious ones with multiple seperate, loops which I LOVE.
Best x-mas gift I got this year.
Nuts go on the first loop, small hexes and tricams on the second,
small cams on the third, and spare biners on the forth. I put my
medium to big cams on the back loops on my harness. My quickdraws
(I carry some on trad climbs, not every piece needs a long sling)
and runners go on the harness. I use the biner-through another,
clipped back trick for all but my longest runners, which I rarely
carry.
Can't stand the weight of my trad rack pulling my harness off, and
mostly, like how easy this makes swinging leads.
From: David Harris
Even better (for me anyway) is the double shoulder rack most often
used by aid climbers. Looks like the shoulder straps from a
backpack, but with two gear loops on each side and no pack -- just
a chest strap to keep it in place. No weight on the hips unless you
want it, easy to change over at belays, nothing dangling around
your feet or knees, gear available on either side in whatever order
or profusion you want it. And lots of room left on your harness
loops for lightweight stuff like slings (biner-through-biner
tripled), cordalettes, locking biners, nut tool...
From: Bill Folk
My take: sling. Why? Faster, more efficient changeover on
multipitch, easier to get it out of the way for squeeze/OW, holds
more gear for long routes. For short leads close to my limit where
I know exactly what gear I need, with no wide sections, I sometime
use my harness loops.
From: Jose Acosta
I put all my gear on an over shoulder sling starting with small
nuts and move back to SLCD's in order of ascending size. My nuts
are all on two biners, tricams on one biner, hexes as needed on one
biner and except for smallest aliens each Friend and Camalot has
it's own biner. I may carry a loose biner or two right in front of
the nuts.
I put slings on my right gear loops, possibly loose biners first,
then a quick draw or two, followed by slings in ascending length
order. I triple loop my 2 footers so their about as long as my
shorter slings. I put weird stuff like ascenders, extra tuber,
locking biners and my belay knife (don't ask) on my left side gear
loops.
I just trash when I'm in chimneys hoping I find the right piece
before I fall. When there's an OW I try to plan the climb so my
partner gets that pitch. It helps to be the one with the guide
book.
From: Frank Stock
Unless I am looking at an exceptionally ugly chimney, ow or a
splitter where I can pretty much figure what I need before
climbing, I rack all protection on the gear sling by size, one cam
per biner, and divide all nuts and a couple small tri cams on two
or three biners. I put the rack on the left or right side as
dictated by the orientation of the pitch, and then put runners over
the other shoulder. If I remember before I leave the ground (ie
I'm scared/concerned) I'll clip a biner to each sling. I rack
loose biners in groups of 5 on each side of the harness on front
gear loops. I usually have a couple of draws that I put next to
the loose biners. On the back loops I'll clip a nut tool and, most
recently, a couple t-blocs.
If I am headed up a chimney or ow I'll put gear I think I'll need
on the side of my body most likely to be outside the crack or
chimney. Nothing worse than trying to grab a cam off the side of
your body stuck in the crack, or trying to finagle it off the gear
sling while slidding inch by inch back down a nasty ow. If I am
headed up a desert splitter I'll usually still use the gear sling
but I'll toss everything off but the sizes I'll need-some people
will rack all of them on the harness, but whenever I have 10 or 15
cams stuck on my harness they get tangled and end up beating the
hell out of my legs. But then again I'm an uncoordinated
non-athlete type.
From: Ratagonia (Ratamus)
OK, no one advocated racking on the harness, so allow me.
Racking on the harness is good because the gear swings around less.
And if properly organized, is in a very specific place. Here's how
I do it (er, rack gear):
Left side, front to back:
Front Loop: TCUs: 2 #0 on one biner, 2 #1 on a biner, 2 #2 on a biner;
2 purple camalots on a biner.
Back Loop : cams getting bigger, generally 2 per biner. Maybe some
quickdraws at the back.
Right side, front to back:
Front Loop: nuts, about 8 per biner, smallest in front to Tricams
( 1 ea 4 smallest ).
Back Loop : quickdraws, then tripppled runners. Belay device, nut tool
On long and/or scary pitches, where I need more gear, I put the
larger cams on the back right and put more slings and quickdraws on
an over-the-shoulder sling. I like having the light stuff on a
sling so it swings around less.
From: Scott Crosson
Despite having been taught to rack gear on a gear sling, I still
prefer to rack it on my harness for shorter climbs when I can get
away with it. Stoppers and TCUs are racked on front right, other
cams on back left, and quick draws and spare biners on the front
left and back right. Works well for me.
On longer climbs, though, this is impractical and overly crowded.
All gear goes on the sling then, w/quickdraws etc on my harness. I
just hate how the sling throws my weight around, gets in my way
when I high-step, and sometimes get tangled in mid-climb.
From: John Byrnes
It doesn't matter how many pitches it is, it matters what *kind* of
climb it is. If it's nice open climbing, then gear on your harness
is okay. If it's close crack/chimney/ OW/dihedral climbing, gear
on your hips (a valuable friction point) could actually prevent you
from doing the route.
From: Brutus of Wyde
Heck, sometimes I find it best to rack everything on a shoulder
sling, then take the dang thing off and dangle it, and the helmet,
on a leash about 6' below me.... Otherwise, them squeeze chimneys
end up feeling like 5.11 offwidth.
From: Karl Lew
Metal hula skirt. All the way.
Sling racks are for them beefy climbers on steroids.
See also:
How do I rack long slings? on Tradgirl
Should I place tri-cams with the point (stinger) up or down? [back
to top] [FAQ contents]
From: Rex Pieper
The original spec sheet from Lowe mentioned that there is NO right or
wrong way to place the tricam in a horizontal crack. It said to let the
placement determine the orientation as there was no difference in
strength or stability in either the point up or point down configuration.
From: Wayne Busch
Either orientation is equally effective. Place the cam so it best accomodates
the the features of the crack. Try to get the pointed side behind a nub or in a
hole, and make sure both rails of the curved sides make good contact.
From: Greg Kneser
I think it depends (tm) on where the best dimple is for said stinger. I
generally find that dimple and then yard on the tricam to set it as much
as possible and then wiggle it to see how good of a fit it is.
If you had equal dimples on each side of the crack, I'd go with placing
the stinger downwards.
From: David Emrich
If other things are equal, stinger up is more stable. Learned it from FOTH,
and it works for me.
From: Llamakid (posted on gunks.com)
The real answer is whichever gives the most solid placement. The manufacturer recommends fulcrum up, so does Freedom of The Hills.
From: Mikey D (posted on gunks.com)
Well, I just looked at the little piece of folded up paper that comes with a tri-cam, and there is not any recommendation as to placement orientation on it. Actually, the instructions don't even tell you how to place it! There are all the usual warnings about misuse can be dangerous, but no guide as to usage. Pretty amazing. I'm not a personal injury attorney, but I can't imagine that not giving instructions would insulate them from liability. The only picture (no text on placement) shows the tri-cam in a vertical crack, so they don't seem to be taking a position as to point up or down.
From: Andrew (posted on gunks.com)
the wonderful thing about tricams is they are so versatile. they work great point up or down, placed like a nut, or placed in camming mode.
From: Mike Rawdon (posted on gunks.com)
Definitely place them whichever way fits the crack more securely. But for the record, placing them point down does NOT generate more leverage. More linear downforce maybe, but not more twisting force. One might think that because the pull is downwards (generally) that having the sling ride above the piece (ie. point down) would get it twisting more. But if you look carefully at a TriCam, you'll see that the sling pulls on a greater lever arm and generates more torque if the point is up and the sling doesn't sit deeply in the groove. I admit this is nothing more than nerdy trivia in 99% of situations. But the difference become more significant as the piece is placed closer to the front of a horizontal (set it deeply and the sling basically pulls OUT, not up/down) and/or as the piece rotates more into position (and IMO most people don't use a small enough TriCam, and fail to realize that they can hold best if rotated nearly 45 degrees).
From: Steven Cherry (posted on gunks.com)
My partner placed two tricams on the way up to the bolt on The Blackout that takes away pretty much all of the R-ness of it. In fact, it might not even be R if you skip the bolt. Anyway, the tricams were tilted about 45 degrees. Scary as all hell to look at, you have to keep letting your brain tell you that they were perfectly good placements.
Of course, you'll want a long sling on them. The reason people like their tricam placements tight is they are afraid of having them get weighted sideways and loosen.
Will a bad piece "slow me down"? / Should I bother placing psychological protection? [back
to top] [FAQ contents]
Note: most of these answers were taken from This one will slow me down, an extremely useful thread containing the physics equations/arguments to back up some of these posts.
From: Tom Moyer
The tech-no-weenie answer is also...it depends.
What it depends *on* is the rope's ability to return to its original length and
act like the same spring again (starting from the same zero point) during the
period of time after your "force absorber" rips and before the good piece gets
loaded.
If the rope was a perfect spring, the piece would help you during its brief stay
in the rock. Ropes are great at acting like textbook springs during the first
extension, but they are slow to return during the relaxation, so the second
impact is very non-textbook. How much elasticity do you get back how soon on
what kind of rope? I don't think anyone's done a good study on this.
Like Karl said - add a screamer. Then the screamer will absorb the energy
instead of the rope.
From: John Byrnes
For example, I took a fall on a #4 RP that had lots of surface area
contact on one side, but the other side was a small crystal. When I
fell the piece popped (Yes, it's a loud POP!) and the next piece
caught me. Upon inspection of the RP, we saw a furrow in the brass
along almost the entire length of the nut, which got deeper as the
nut was pulled past the crystal, but still didn't stop me. Thus, the
deformation of the nut absorbed a lot of energy.
I've seen alumnimum stoppers, cams, etc. that have deformed and pulled
over the years, as well as rock breaking. Thus it doesn't "depend"
just on the rope.
From: Ken Cline
For example, suppose you had two bad RPs placed one inch apart. When
you hit the first one, you would slow down (stretching the rope) until
the piece fails. Then you fall one inch further and hit the second
RP. Q: What is the tension is in the rope at this point? A: Almost
exactly the same tension that caused the first piece to rip. This is
because the rope hasn't had a chance to release the energy stored in
it (i.e. to spring back to a shorter length).
Put 10 equally RPs in a row and chances are high that if the first
fails, so will all the others. Partial failure of closely spaced
pieces won't reduce the peak force much if one of them holds. Of
course anyone who's seen _Hard Grit_ knows that 10 RPs make a fine
anchor (though you should expect some lossage) ;-)
This doesn't mean that the RP in your example didn't help. When the
next piece is significantly lower than the one that failed, the rope
has time to relax a bit, dissipating energy that would otherwise
contribute to peak fall force (in the form of spring energy. Tom
worries that the rope will be less springy after the first bit of
stretching, but this doesn't bother me because the work that went into
stiffening the rope can't be used twice to stretch it on the final
catch.
From: Tom Moyer
I've seen nuts shear over a foot down a
sandstone crack (that was a fun one to clean) and I'd think there was
some significant energy absorption going on as the nut carved a track
in the stone.
Yep - you're right. If the distance is significant - and a foot of travel
definitely is - then the energy absorption can be, too.
From: Karl Baba
The yank of a bad piece pulling out is sometimes enough to flip ya
upside-down so you can hit your head first instead of your ankle!
Hope springs eternal, at least put a screamer on it.
From: Mike Farris
Ask the following:
1) Will the piece in any way endanger the safety and security of the bomber
gear below it? E.g. upper bad piece load momentarily, causes out/up pull on
lower good nut& dislodges it, upper piece blows, climber falls and falls...
2) Will failure of the gear cause rockfall (the Wil-E-Coyote Effect)?- e.g. a
sling around a loose horn, climber falls, horn fails, hits climber on head...
3) Will failure of gear endanger rope? E.g. crappy gear at beginning of
traverse across ledge. When second comes up, falls below crappy piece, piece
blows, long pendulum fall w/ rope raking across loose blocks and sharp edge,
rope fails...
and so on. If you are climbing more or less straight up and are using long
enough runners, usually it's ok to place dicey gear (unless you stand around
and fuss so much that you overpump and flame out...that's my modus operandi).
From: Nathan Sweet
You should ask yourself "is it better than
nothing?", because frequently thats is the other option. Nothing.
Then again, nothing isn't always bad, cause you dont waste time/strength
mucking about with tiny gear on something you arent ever going to fall on
anyway, but a 00 tcu, a few rp's, the swarthy Alien, they dont take up much
room , and are cheap (mental) insurance.
From: Ross
I learned awhile back that it can be bad to clip bad pro, especially if you
decide to down climb for whatever reason and don't unclip it. Now its
above you and your pumped and and ....
From: Tom Moyer
Assuming none of the problems mentioned by other people happen - no loose
blocks pulled off, impact doesn't flip you upside down, etc - the piece that rips can
only help you. The very lengthy and not very earth-shattering point is only that it
doesn't help you as much as you might think. Of course (repeating what's been said a
lot), if there's a screamer on the manky piece, all it has to do is hold 500 lbs (the
rip force of the screamer) to do you a lot of good.
From: Ken Cline
Ditto.
To look at this from a physics perspective, consider that the fall
force will be largely determined by the net energy absorbed (work done
on the rope) per unit length of rope, and that energy can never be
greater than the potential energy lost during the fall. An RP that
fails in the middle of the fall can only decrease the net work done on
the rope, so, aside for climbing concerns (being flipped over,
downclimbing, ...) it shouldn't hurt.
From: Mahoi Huang
also, equalizing two small pieces is much better than placing them in
series. if the first piece blows when you fall more than N feet, the next
piece of the same kind will probably blow, too. If they are equalized, all
being equal, you could expect them to blow at 4N feet. But two pieces
qualized should work way better than clipped in separately.
From: Brutus of Wyde
two words:
Screamers.
equalized placements if possible.
if tiny wires, and hanging out to place 'em doesn't increase my
chances of falling, place at every opportunity.
redundant placements if possible.
don't fall.
From: MadDog
So what does it mean to me when I'm leading a pitch with questionable pro?
Keep looking if I have the time and am not pumping out. Move my head
around, traverse a little to the side if possible, keep looking, keep
thinking. I've been caught by jingus pro that I thought was only psycho.
You're on your own when you're out there so you may as well take the time to
be instinctive, possibly considering the downclimb option every now and
then.
Should I carry a nut tool while leading? / How do I rack my nut tool? [back
to top] [FAQ contents]
From: Steven Cherry, 9/3/2001
I try not to have a nut tool at all if I'm leading.
From: Dingus Milktoast, 4/21/1997
I don't like giving my second my nut tool. Invariably I'll need it on
lead to clean a crack or remove a poorly placed nut.
From: Clyde Soles, 1/3/1995
It is not a bad idea for both climbers to carry a nut tool. If you dont, the
leader invariably gets three quarters up the pitch before realizing they forgot
to give the only tool to the second. Also, she who has a nut tool gets the
bootie!
From: Vertigo, 9/1/2001
I keep my 'proddler' on a loop of cord. When seconding, I clip this
onto the rope above my harness then- hey presto- you can reach as far
as you like. If you drop it- it just slides down to your harness.
From: Craig Brossman, 3/20/1995
I have used this same technique when I know there is a particularly tough
nut comming up, but be careful, I have also made moves where the hook on
the tool gets caught up and hinders my upward movement.
From: Nathan Sweet, 9/3/2001
Best nut tool racking for me:
1/2 a telephone handset cord. You can swage the cord ends into loops. Do not be
tempted to loop through the chuch-key end of the BD tool, as it negates it's
primary function. Clip the other end to a biner on a waist loop. Usually I just
keep the nut tool hook stuck in my chalk bag, using the same biner for both.
The springy cord lets you reach nearly anything, then just let it go and it
will pop back to a reasonable position.
From: J. Freeman, 9/7/2001
I know someone who uses one of those retractable key things.
The brand name is the "Keyback" available at any decent hardware
store. (We've all seen these. They are standard for any grade school
janitor.)
The trick is to get the "heavy duty" model with the extra long cable.
The friction clip of the Keyback will slot directly onto a gear loop
on your harness.
Absolutely no fumbling and no possibility of dropping your tool. Ive
used one for years now. Once you use a Keyback to rack your tool,
you'll never go back to anything else.
From: Sean Parker, 8/22/1999
Instead of using perlon I like to use a small elastic cord. That way the
cord is short when racked but stretchs to arms length if needed. I just
use an oval with the cord tied to it and the nut tool and put the nut
tool on the biner. I can reach down and take the nut tool on and off as
needed. Works for me.
From: Geoff Clitheroe, 8/24/1999
I used to use elastic till one day I was cleaning a tricky aid roof,
I put the nut tool in position in the crack and was reaching for my
hammer when the hook I was standing on popped. As I swung out the
elastic stretched until the nut tool went past my left eye like a
missile.
Now it's back on cord. I toyed with the idea of those retractor things
people keep keyrings on but it could suffer from the same eye popping
potential.
From: Rob Williams, 9/5/2001
I've got one of these nifty little buggers. It has one MAJOR drawback
though: it won't open your beer. After finding this out I tried to
order a BD beer opener but they are back-ordered. Damn. I guess I'll
keep using my teeth.
From: Karl Lew, 8/22/1999
Here's a way to rack your nut tool to tame
that huge humongously hungry hook.
From: Clint Cummins, 8/22/1999
Here is a simpler way: use a nut tool
that doesn't have a hook. In the few time times that I
use a nut tool, it is to tap a nut upwards from below.
The hook on my regular nut tool has disappeared, from frequent
use of the tool to garden out cracks! (It was tiny to begin
with; a Leeper "Hooker" clone). I haven't missed the
lack of a hook on it.
From: Karl Baba, 8/23/1999
As long as we are tawking about nut tools, my pet peeve is when folks
string their nut tool on a tiny short liitle piece of cord. I believe
it is much nicer to have a cord long enough to stay clipped to the rack
and still reach the crack. THat way, there is no way to drop it. I
have probably found 5 nut tools at the base of climbs. The stronger
cord (at least 4 mil or bigger) can be used for a bit of funkness
tugging.
From: Alan Lindsay, 8/24/1999
I used to use a long cord as a keeper, girth hitched to my gear loops. I
always hated fighting with the tangle of cord, tho.
I've recently become persuaded the ideal deal is a short loop of cord, just
larger than my hand. When I take it off the gear loop (using a mini-biner,
thank you very much) I shake it onto my hand and it hangs on like a bracelet.
Can't drop it. I pull it off with my teeth, other hand or wriggle my hand out
after I clip it back (admittedly the most awkward part, but I think I'll get
used to it.)
From: John Byrnes, 7/2/2002
I use a big ole biner, clipped on with the gate down and out.
One end of the cord is tied into a loop, then *taped* to the
biner opposite the nose. This keeps it from slipping off and
out of the way. The other end of the cord (about 2.5ft) is tied
to the next-to-last hole in the tool.
This leaves the last hole, the largest, open for your finger and
for clipping into the biner. To quickly remove the tool, just slide
it over the gate, push the gate open, and it'll slip right off without
any diddling. You can put it back on by pushing the gate open too.
From: E. Stefke, 3/17/1995
I tie
about 4 feet of 3mm cord (actually I've got it doubled so I actually girth
hitch it) to a front gear loop on the harness and attach the other end to the
nut tool. Then I clip the tool to that (or any other) gear loop with a biner.
When cleaning the biner comes off with the nut tool. One might think that
the cord gets in the way of other gear, but I've not had any problems to date.
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