Marking Gear
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Climbing helmet manufacturers do not recommend putting stickers on helmets (some adhesives can degrade the plastic), so that got me thinking about all of the methods I've seen of marking pro/gear to help ID it. The most common thing I've seen is a small strip of colored electrical tape, but I've also seen nail polish and I suspect there are other methods out there. Are any of these techniques for marking pro particularly better or worse than others? Is there the potential to degrade or damage gear by marking it? |
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The primary safety concern with stickers on helmets is that they will not allow the shell to shatter and disperse force of an impact. Not a safety concern on hard goods like biners that are not designed to break |
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Obviously not, otherwise people wouldnt mark their gear. Adhesives wont hurt aluminum. |
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i dislike tape because when it gets chewed up by placing your gear it leaves this sticky residue. Heat unravels electrical tape very easily too. Every few years i use touch up car paint to mark all my hardware. Slings come and go so i never mark them. |
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I use nail polish on aluminum (carabiners. Cams, nuts, etc). I'm sure it's fine on metal. |
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I used to use electrical tape, but it eventually wears off and litters. I hate seeing little bits of blue/green/yelllow etc tape floating around, especially in the alpine. |
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I'm with ya on the nail polish. mark it on the spine or some recessed part, doesnt wear away at all... |
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dsmit wrote:Touched up every 15-20 days?That's 15-20 climbing days... could be anywhere between 4-6 months of total time, for me. That also refers to the more heavily used items, like my ATC/belay biner, racking biners, and quickdraws. The biners on my extendable slings last much longer. |
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Thanks for the insight, guys! |
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I use reflective tape from 3M. It sticks like mad, doesn't leave a sticky residue, and if you want to know where your gear is at night, just shine a headlamp at it. BAM! |
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I also use nail polish, both hardware and slings. For the slings I color both ends where they were cut with the hot knife, not in the middle and not on any of the bar tacks. |
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I saw a product called "The Mark" behind the counter at Ragged Mountain located in North Conway. It looked fancy! I hear it works well. |
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Kirby1013 wrote:You really don't need to mark your rack. You'll be able to figure out what's yours at the end of day.I (and many others) disagree. At places like the creek where 5-10 of the exact same cam go up any given route, the only way to figure out what is yours at the end of the day is if everyones rack is marked. (or if everyones is marked except for one person's rack) I use colored duct tape although it certainly has its flaws. many other ways to do it. |
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I use a highlighter to mark white lettering of the CE tag of my runners. I use the same color highlighter as the nail polish on my aluminum gear. Although the highlighter should be reapplied after getting wet. |
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All my biners are marked the same way and I don't expect the markings to wear off soon, if at all. Most are marked with nail polish, some (non-anadized) are marked with colored Sharpie. The nose right above the gate hinge is where the marking is, for solid gates you can't see it until the gate is opened. Wire gates are in the same spot but obviously more visible. |
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We use gear tape from identi-tape.com: |
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Andrew Mayer wrote: I (and many others) disagree. At places like the creek where 5-10 of the exact same cam go up any given route, the only way to figure out what is yours at the end of the day is if everyones rack is marked. (or if everyones is marked except for one person's rack) I use colored duct tape although it certainly has its flaws. many other ways to do it.The reason I said that is when my rack was new I always was able to tell which cam's are mine by how worn they are. I didn't mean no one should mark their gear ever. Rereading this does remind me of something else. I mark all my screws by engraving them with a dremel. I think if the time comes I'll do the same with my rock gear. |
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I just bought some of these: |
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dmb wrote:I just bought some of these: toughtags.co.uk/ Hopefully they'll last longer than electrical tape.I like the fact they put contact information on the stickers! Genius! |
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I use trango rack tags, they're pre-cut and they last 3-4 seasons. Also they don't leave messy adhesive like electrical tape. |
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Ditto on the Trango rack tags for biners and nuts. Lasts much better than electrical tape. Paint markers on other gear. |