Slinging a Nut Wire
|
|
Scenario: You are climbing a pitch and have already run it out a fair bit. You find a great nut placement with no other options in sight, the only issue is that the wire length puts the biner over a lip of the rock. |
|
|
use basket hitch, not clove hitch. I do this fairly regularly. |
|
|
Hmm...not a huge fan of the idea of hitching a wire, for the reasons mentioned. What about using a locking biner? |
|
|
Basket hitch. Definitely. |
|
|
Huh. Fair enough. |
|
|
wivanoff wrote:Basket hitch. Definitely. I think DMM has a video about that. Edit: dmmclimbing.com/knowledge/i… Awesome! Thanks for finding and posting that. |
|
|
wivanoff wrote:Basket hitch. Definitely. I think DMM has a video about that. Edit: dmmclimbing.com/knowledge/i… Beat me to it. |
|
|
Push the wire through on another nut,,don't hitch it , just loop it and then clip both ends and go |
|
|
john strand wrote:Push the wire through on another nut,,don't hitch it , just loop it and then clip both ends and go Is that different than a basket hitch? (for the runner) |
|
|
What Dave said. |
|
|
|
|
|
CornCob wrote: Medic and Dave, is this what you are referring to? This looks like a great way to kink the shit out of the wires on two nuts. I'll stick to the basket, or even a girth for that matter. |
|
|
Dave Schultz wrote:you can also join two nuts together by feeding ends through the eyes of the wire. I can place a nut and basket hitch it one handed. Can you join those two nuts together one handed? |
|
|
I'll just basket hitch it... Draw had a sling on it that I was going to use anyway... What if I want or need that other nut later... |
|
|
The basket hitch is better than "larks foot" with two nuts. The DMM tests indicate the basket hitch---with both dyneema and nylon---is about 26% stronger. Add to this the fact that using two nuts ties up a second nut you might be able to use elsewhere, and creates a more easily dislodged placement by virtue of a two nut-length moment arm, and you have an inferior solution to the problem of levering a carabiner over an edge. |
|
|
Dave Schultz wrote: Definitely, can't you? Might be something to work on next time. Never tried it one handed. Seems it would be too fiddly when I'm pumped. And the basket hitch is easier and safer. |
|
|
Agreed! But for the record (and no other particularly good reason in view of the DMM numbers), here is the one-handed method, which however isn't always doable. |
|
|
That's what I was trying to say Rich. it's easier and faster than putting 2 nuts together. |
|
|
rgold wrote:The basket hitch is better than "larks foot" with two nuts. The DMM tests indicate the basket hitch---with both dyneema and nylon---is about 26% stronger. Add to this the fact that using two nuts ties up a second nut you might be able to use elsewhere, and creates a more easily dislodged placement by virtue of a two nut-length moment arm, and you have an inferior solution to the problem of levering a carabiner over an edge. (You can set up the nut-to-nut configuration one-handed...but don't bother!) Maybe I'm reading DMM's chart differently from you, but to me, it looks like the only test performed of nut to nut lark's foot was with a number 1 wallnut to another number 1 wallnut. The other tests are being performed with nylon or dyneema lark's footed to the nut. |
|
|
rgold wrote:Agreed! But for the record (and no other particularly good reason in view of the DMM numbers), One potential reason is if you are out of slings. Not ideal, but not a bad trick to know in a pinch. I put this one in "better than nothing" category. |
|
|
rgold wrote:Agreed! But for the record (and no other particularly good reason in view of the DMM numbers), here is the one-handed method, which however isn't always doable. 1. Place the fir..... Here is how I interpreted your steps. john strand wrote:That's what I was trying to say Rich. it's easier and faster than putting 2 nuts together. Is this the same thing you had in mind john? |









