Gate Chatter... Myth or fact? .. Deadly or lifely?
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We all spend way too much time on the net and not enough time climbing. We've all spent hours in a gear shop only to leave with nothing in hand. So what better place to ask about gate chatter. |
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I started climbing in 1994 and still have never heard of gate chatter being the reason for a longer fall/death. |
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consider that almost every "pro" sport climber you see in the films use solid gates ... and consider that theyll whip more in a day than most people here do in a week ... or a month ... or a year even .... |
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I've never fallen in a situation where I was looking for gate chatter, however I've heard what sounds an awful lot like it, though it's never resulted in an unclipped rope or anything. If you aren't tying extra belay loops into your harness and obsessively re clipping draws so they "face the right direction" and eating cheese balls individually toothpicked at predetermined times of day you have better things to be worrying about than whether or not your gates are light and wirey. |
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Chatter? Dunno. Some types of accidents make it hard to figure out exactly what happened. |
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johnnyrig wrote:Got me thinking... anyone ever test a dynamic fall on the minor axis of a wiregate? As in, did the rope running over the small-radius wire get damaged in a fall? After all, never heard of the factory testing for this, gate flutter aside. Not over the wire, but, interesting: |
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I 'm not sure that there are too much accidental occurrence, I think there are 50%, 50% of death and life. I start my climbing in 2006 and visit there for more then 5 times due to its attraction and tough time. |
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Consider the fact that most leader falls generate between 4-7kn of force on the system. And if you look at the open gate strength of most carabiners, it is typically 7kn or greater. This is probably why you don't really hear about carabiners breaking in a fall. |
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Interesting topic. I would love to hear of any stories about ropes unclipping. I get nervous when my foot or body is moving around the draw, that I'll accidentally open the gate. |
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I dated a girl with braces that had gate chatter. |
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I was belaying my buddy In Indian creek when he took a huge fall on a yellow alien which was scary enough then we notice that the piece directly below the alien and about 7' lower had un-clipped its self and it was a wire gate if i remember correctly. If the yellow would have blown it could have been very bad news. |
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A few years back we were having this conversation and some aid climber was claiming that he unclipped ~20 pieces in a single fall. He attributed all of this to gate flutter. |
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JLP wrote:Biners break all the time, either from non-ideal loading or the gate opening. This is ancient news only a noob could find doubt or surprise in. I think he's joking... |
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Robbey Clark wrote:I 'm not sure that there are too much accidental occurrence, I think there are 50%, 50% of death and life. I start my climbing in 2006 and visit there for more then 5 times due to its attraction and tough time. CJC wrote: huh Yea, the climbing's a lot of the way easier I'd bet, then the English when it comes to some of the learning of thing to do. |
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CJC wrote:if the biner is loaded at the instant it's open you're in trouble. I think most of the biners on my rack are rated ~8kn open. Which is higher than what a .3 camalot, 0 C3, or #5 stopper are rated. |
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I HAD GATE FLUTTER HAPPEN TO ME IN A FALL THAT ULTIMATLY BROKE THE BINER AND CAUSED ME TO CRATOR INTO THE GROUND FROM ABOUT 100' |
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Jim Amidon wrote:I HAD GATE FLUTTER HAPPEN TO ME IN A FALL THAT ULTIMATLY BROKE THE BINER AND CAUSED ME TO CRATOR INTO THE GROUND FROM ABOUT 100' it's real..... Your being very closed minded and posting info you have no idea about. The stats are out there Care to elaborate? Why did one biner failing cause you to deck? Or was it multiple failures? |
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It's wrtten up in ANAM........ |
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And most of us don't have ANAM. Elaborate or stop yelling. |
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