Big Wall Ratings. Don'd understand them!
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So I am relatively new to climbing in general, and new to big wall climbing all together. I've coming to understand the YDS rating system, and even aid climb ratings, but it seems when big walls are rated they are given a YDS type rating and a Roman Numeral and an aid rating. I don't understand why all three? For instance I believe The Nose is a 5.9, C2, IV. The Nose is obviously more difficult than the 5.9's I've been climbing, so I must be misunderstanding something. |
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So when you look at The Nose you see "the best balance" of free climbing and aid climbing. 5.9 C2 means that if you can aid C2 then the hardest "free" climbing you'll have to do is 5.9. This best balance varies. You can not know how to aid and free the whole damn thing. Or you can aid most of it and climbing it at an easier "free" grade. The C in C2 means you can aid the route clean, without hammers and stuff. C2 is a grade for the danger/risk of falling. Then the Roman Numeral signifies how long the route should take. Now this varies like crazy depending on a thousand factors. IV means it would take a full day-ish. Many people take days to climb the nose, some climb it in mere hours. Hope this makes sense. |
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Thanks Matias that helps for sure, so I guess if I'm understanding the ratings as I read them are for either free climbing or aiding, not both at once? |
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Just for background, I'm an experienced free climber and aspiring big wall climber. The rating system is extreme shorthand for how difficult/committing a climb is. The Nose is a good example. The VI rating means it is traditionally more than a two day climb. Compare it to a grade V, like the Regular Route on Half Dome or many routes on Washington Column, and it is much more committing. South Face of Washington Column, The Prow, and West Face of Leaning Tower are routes designated V and generally climbed in two days. |
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Ha, I had to double check that, The Nose is ('commitment') grade VI, not IV. |
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JbPhillips wrote:Thanks Matias that helps for sure, so I guess if I'm understanding the ratings as I read them are for either free climbing or aiding, not both at once? 5.9 C2 means the hardest move that absolutely must be freed and cannot be aided is 5.9. So if you intend to climb the route 100% aid with absolutely zero free climbing beyond what is absolutely, positively necessary, then the hardest move you will have to do is 5.9. In the case of the Nose, the 5.9 section they are talking about is a 40' chimney on the backside of the Texas flake about half way up. It's mandatory free because both sides of the chimney are blank and there is no crack for pro, thus no way to aid it without drilling a rivet ladder. |
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John Hoffman 1 wrote:Compare it to a grade V, like the Regular Route on Half Dome or Regular NW face is grade VI. Call it VI- compared to El Cap. Hell, the approach by itself takes most of a full day with 80 lb packs, ha. |
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JbPhillips wrote:Thanks Matias that helps for sure, so I guess if I'm understanding the ratings as I read them are for either free climbing or aiding, not both at once? Another way to understand it is to know that the combined grades change based upon what you do. To stay with the Nose, it's rated 5.8 C2 or 5.9 C1 or 5.13+ (according to ST Guide). So as you climb harder free climbing the easier the aid climbing expectations until you reach freeclimb status where no aid would be needed. Think of the bigwall grade not as a static rating in combination but a ratio of the expected type of climbing you'll encounter. BenL wrote:re: "there are no VI free climbs that I am aware of" there are countless grade VI free climbs on el cap.... nose, salathe, zodiac, dawn wall, .... Those routes are considered grade VI when climbed via free and aid. When climbed all free by a competent party at the free grade, the time to climb it is no longer grade VI. |
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kevin deweese wrote:When climbed all free by a competent party at the free grade, the time to climb it is no longer grade VI. I'd be ok calling most of the free routes on El Cap grade VI. With the exception of Freerider and Tommy Caldwell's speed records it seems that most pro climbers spend plenty of days on the actual free ascent of a route (not including working the route ahead of time) to qualify as a grade VI. |
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BenL wrote:re: "there are no VI free climbs that I am aware of" there are countless grade VI free climbs on el cap.... nose, salathe, zodiac, dawn wall, .... True, I forgot those go free. I more or less meant there are not grade any grade VI free climbs that are normally done free and are not normally considered to be an aid climb. |
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20 kN wrote: I more or less meant there are not grade any grade VI free climbs that are normally done free and are not normally considered to be an aid climb. This might be one (66 pitches): |
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@gavin thanks for the reply, yes El Cap is all grade VI! I don't know how I mixed up my Roman Numerals. Regarding RNWF, I had to go back and check, and was surprised to see it's considered grade VI, since most parties do it in two days now. |
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John Hoffman 1 wrote:The thing is, we see the ratings in a book and try seem fixed, but really it's just shorthand for how to describe a route to future climbers. Some routes that were A5 when they went up are C3 now. And as far as I understand, the aid rating is not based on hardest mandatory moves, but on the style and difficulty of the first ascent party. Incorrect. The aid rating, just like a free rating, is based upon the hardest* mandatory move that a climber chooses to make. I stress "chooses" because Every climb will have a different rating based upon whether you're choosing to free it, choosing to clean aid it, or choosing to nail it.
John Hoffman 1 wrote:I'm trying to think of examples, but ST often lists "cruxes can/cannot be pulled through on gear" this indicates more of an expected difficulty level free rather than a mandatory one. Many routes could be climbed entirely on aid. Ultimately, it's a much less scientific system than it appears. Also incorrect. Your example of "cruxes can/cannot be pulled through on gear" is exactly about a mandatory free difficulty precisely because one cannot french free through a difficult section and if not able to climb at that mandatory level, you will need to bail. |
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"A3 you fall a long ways, A4 you fall and get hurt and A5 you fall and die" |