Clipping into the thumb loop?
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Sometimes when a cam is placed deeper in a crack clipping a draw into the nylon is really difficult, and ive found myself clipping an alpine draw into the thumb loop because it was easier to access. |
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The sling acts as a flexible attachment point to your cam and somewhat prevents it from walking. |
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According to BD it reduces the strength of your cams by a few kn. Don’t do it unless you have to. |
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I would skip doing that on smaller placements and sketchier gear, but I use WC for my larger size, and even if it does weaken a few KN....(I think WC quotes their cams as weakening 2kn when extended)... I can't see that being too big of a problem. Are people really out here taking 10kn whippers?? |
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He's not connecting a sling to the thumb loop in his situation, he's connecting a biner. Everything that comes after the biner is immaterial to the connection to the cams thumb loop. I've seen no research suggesting that clipping a biner to the thumb loop is in anyway a safety issue (short of the obvious nonlocking aspect of biners used for alpine draws) |
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I’ve whipped on a BD C4 #0.3 I clipped through the thumb loop. The carabiner stripped some of the plastic sheathing off and bent the wire underneath, but the cam stayed put and came out normally when I pulled on the trigger. Ironically the only reason I had clipped the thumb loop rather than the sling was because I had wanted to roughly equalize two marginal placements (the other was a blue alien). |
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Artem Vasilyev wrote: What about smaller cams? I could see 2kn making a big difference with microcams. Unless you have doubts about a cam’s sling (why are you climbing with it then?) I can’t see many situations outside of aid where it would make sense to do this. |
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it will depend on failure mode. for example if you get at a 2kn reduction from 10kn to 8kn at the loop, but have a 4kn limit at the axle/wherever, the 2kn reduction isnt that important. |
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I’ve clipped into the thumb loop on rare occasions. Sometimes you just gotta make stuff work in the moment, even if it’s suboptimal. |
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Black Diamond says in the instructions that clipping the thumb loop reduces the strength by 2kN for C3s, X4s, Z4s, and previous generation C4s. |
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Dave K wrote: One of the reasons for the thumb loop is for aid climbing, where it is beneficial to be able to clip your ladder as high as possible. In this situation, you're only exposing the thumb loop to body weight or a good bounce test though, so no harm done. When I then move my ladder off of that piece and clip the rope into it as fall protection, I would not clip into the thumb loop, but would use a carabiner via the attached nylon sling (or with further extension if needed) |
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I aid off of them that way to get a higher top step... Still dont clip them as protection like that though, never found a reason to do this free climbing though... I know this kid I call "Deep Crack" because he talks about the crack needing to be deep, if it's too shallow he can't jam it haha... (aka he can't crack climb but a diff topic). Just saying this as you could change your handle to "Deep Cam" ;) im just kidding of course |
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I’m late to the party on this, but I want to answer the why. A carabiner decreases surface area, creating a sharper bend in the cable loop where force is applied, and the cable will begin to split at that fold under a lower force than if it was applied via the sling. This sharper bend is also what results in a kink under pre-failure loads. Take-aways:
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"I had wanted to roughly equalize two marginal placements (the other was a blue alien)." |
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Evan Bossowrote: Black Diamond says in the instructions that clipping the thumb loop reduces the strength by 2kN for C3s, X4s, Z4s, and previous generation C4s. thanks for posting that, definitely missed that diagram in the pamphlet |
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Matthew Clausenwrote: I’m late to the party on this, but I want to answer the why. You beat me to it. :-) |
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Alan Lwrote: BD doesnt use extendable slings on their cams because they feel it kinks the cable more than it should. If a single strand of an extendable sling will kink the cable more than the wider sling BD uses, a biner will kink it at least as much as the extended sling, so you are potentially going to damage the thumb loop. Not enough to where it will fail under must falls, but it may put a kink in it. If you know you are going to have to set it deep, can you clip and alpine or a sling before you set it? |
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Steve Levin wrote: Hey Steve: It’s not back-clipped. The rope is coming from below and next to the rock, then going up through the biner and out to the leader’s harness — as it should. I agree that first attaching the biner to the sling would be better. |
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George Bracksieckwrote: seems like the thumb loop was clipped with the gate behind the loop, where it should be gate in front. as shown the biner wants to twist |
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C Limenskiwrote: I don’t like the biner in that pictured position. I just don’t think that it’s back-clipped. |