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bearbreeder
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Jul 10, 2015
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Mar 2009
· Points: 3,065
you can tell the SPIs because they will loudly tell you they are "rock guides" You can tell the full rock guides ... Because they wont tell you they are guides, but regale u of stories of epics Thats not much exagerated ... ;)
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Alex Bury
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Jul 10, 2015
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Ojai, CA
· Joined Jun 2012
· Points: 2,396
^^^ Some truth to that. But what about Rock Instructors? Always falling between the cracks...
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bearbreeder
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Jul 10, 2015
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Mar 2009
· Points: 3,065
Theyre too busy climbing in good weather to yak about it And when the weather is bad theyre delivering pizza ;)
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Alex Bury
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Jul 10, 2015
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Ojai, CA
· Joined Jun 2012
· Points: 2,396
"when the weather is bad, they are delivering pizzas." Actually this is typically done at night. After the climbing....busy life!
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bearbreeder
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Jul 10, 2015
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Mar 2009
· Points: 3,065
Deliver pizza by headlamp If yr gear sucks ... No one can hear u scream anywayz
;)
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Alex Bury
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Jul 10, 2015
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Ojai, CA
· Joined Jun 2012
· Points: 2,396
^^^ I hope they tipped....
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Craig Childre
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Jul 10, 2015
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Lubbock, TX
· Joined Aug 2006
· Points: 4,850
For most subjects... not just climbing... I have found that those who have been "certified" tend to be less competent than those who simply operate in their particular field with out being certified. The competent crowd can demonstrate their capabilities readily, and need no validation of their abilities, their history of performance speaks for itself. The "certified" crowd have a certificate that detail their abilities, and cite it as their qualification. Many exceptions do exist, but more often than not, I find this to be the case. Wait... isn't this the X4 failure thread? ;)
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stevecurtis
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Jul 10, 2015
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Petaluma California
· Joined May 2007
· Points: 257
Interesting. After 38 years, I've never had that happen on a cam, and yes, I've taken plenty of hard falls. Also, contra Dow, I don't always extend the cam slings, especially when an extra 2 ft of fall is likely to put me on a ledge--common on trad routes of any grade. I am careful with cam placements. 10 years ago there was a broken yellow alien on a crag in New Hampshire--The Vulture or some such name for the route. Elicited the "Alien panic" of 05. Well, 10 falls on a .3 C4? Sounds like the Cam did pretty well. I wouldn't rely upon a single .3 to keep me off the ground.
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Alex Bury
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Jul 10, 2015
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Ojai, CA
· Joined Jun 2012
· Points: 2,396
Sorry for the drift. Really dont have too much to add as far as the relevant topic. Except now I like my C3's even more...
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Trondheim
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Jul 10, 2015
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Mar 2015
· Points: 35
Jake Jones wrote: This is incorrect. The .75, .5, and .4 have two axles, while the .3, .2 and .1 have a single stacked axle- meaning that the two outer lobes are on a smaller diameter axle and the inner lobes are on a larger diameter axle, but they both are on the same axis. Oh sorry my mistake. Not that fluent in English.
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Trondheim
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Jul 10, 2015
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Mar 2015
· Points: 35
Guys.... you know you added over a page to the fail thread... imagine the people not reading but noticing the x4 fails have a ton of pages...
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Luc-514
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Jul 10, 2015
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Montreal, QC
· Joined Nov 2006
· Points: 12,535
bearbreeder wrote:Deliver pizza by headlamp If yr gear sucks ... No one can hear u scream anywayz ;) Isn't that the usual 11pm Squamish lets go climb by headlamp conga line?
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bearbreeder
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Jul 10, 2015
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Mar 2009
· Points: 3,065
Luc wrote: Isn't that the usual 11pm Squamish lets go climb by headlamp conga line? But the pizza didnt "fail" when u needed it most Havent seen many headlamps up the chief this year ... Guess the pizza biznizz aint doing so hawt ;)
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Trondheim
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Jul 26, 2015
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Mar 2015
· Points: 35
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Peter Jacobs
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Sep 6, 2015
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Boulder, CO
· Joined Sep 2015
· Points: 35
Hey guys. Sorry to hear about your cam failure. I also had a recent bad experience with a .2 x4 failing on me when I was climbing at phantom spires near tahoe. What happened was I placed the cam very well in a parallel crack with a constriction near the lip and fell when the cam was at my waist height. I will post a few photos of the cam and I want to point out a few things. First notice the large chunk of metal missing. I think that this is a failure of the metallurgy but I can't be sure. Also notice that the damage is all to the middle of the cam lobes. This suggests that it was placed well and simply did not exert enough pressure on the walls to stop. By the way I was placing it into excellent granite. I am really bothered by this fall and I have returned all of my x4 cams to REI. I came to within 4 feet of the deck and I placed this piece very carefully. It should not have failed.
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runout
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Sep 6, 2015
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Jun 2013
· Points: 30
Pete Jacobs wrote:Hey guys. Sorry to hear about your cam failure. I also had a recent bad experience with a .2 x4 failing on me when I was climbing at phantom spires near tahoe. What happened was I placed the cam very well in a parallel crack with a constriction near the lip and fell when the cam was at my waist height. I will post a few photos of the cam and I want to point out a few things. First notice the large chunk of metal missing. I think that this is a failure of the metallurgy but I can't be sure. Also notice that the damage is all to the middle of the cam lobes. This suggests that it was placed well and simply did not exert enough pressure on the walls to stop. By the way I was placing it into excellent granite. I am really bothered by this fall and I have returned all of my x4 cams to REI. I came to within 4 feet of the deck and I placed this piece very carefully. It should not have failed. so the cam just pulled out? No umbrella or anything?
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bearbreeder
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Sep 6, 2015
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Mar 2009
· Points: 3,065
- even a "well placed" micro cam can pull ... Never trust a single microcam if u can help it - falls will bang up cam lobes, even short ones especially nearer the ground .... And microcams have even less metal to get banged up ... Im no fan of the X4s ... But the above holds true for all micro cams ;)
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Forthright
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Sep 7, 2015
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Oct 2011
· Points: 110
Pete Jacobs wrote:Hey guys. Sorry to hear about your cam failure. I also had a recent bad experience with a .2 x4 failing on me when I was climbing at phantom spires near tahoe. What happened was I placed the cam very well in a parallel crack with a constriction near the lip and fell when the cam was at my waist height. I will post a few photos of the cam and I want to point out a few things. First notice the large chunk of metal missing. I think that this is a failure of the metallurgy but I can't be sure. Also notice that the damage is all to the middle of the cam lobes. This suggests that it was placed well and simply did not exert enough pressure on the walls to stop. By the way I was placing it into excellent granite. I am really bothered by this fall and I have returned all of my x4 cams to REI. I came to within 4 feet of the deck and I placed this piece very carefully. It should not have failed. What route?
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Aaron Hope
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Sep 10, 2015
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San Luis Obispo
· Joined Nov 2009
· Points: 346
How high were you when you fell(i.e. how much rope was out between you and the belayer)? A short fall with only 15 feet of rope can be very static.
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acrophobe
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Sep 10, 2015
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Orange, CT
· Joined Jul 2010
· Points: 0
Pete, I have a few questions about your placement. You said it was a parallel sided crack. Was it a vertical crack or a horizontal one? If it was vertical, was the stem pointing almost straight down? Out at a 45 degree angle? Or? Thanks.
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