RACK ENVY
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That rack of guidebooks may be the most impressive thing, save maybe that you already have a #7 and an #8. |
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Peter G wrote:well here's mine nicely hung on its pegboard since covid started. wait....what’s the story on this ?? |
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Buck Rio wrote: good call Buck. This needs to be said in the thread "pacing gear placements" |
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Mark Pilate wrote: You haven't come across an 8b+ chalkbag before? https://8bplus.com/en/They're quite popular here... |
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Mark Pilate wrote: That would be the girlfriends chalkbag that she bought for cheep a couple years back. @Sean |
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hillbilly hijinks wrote: My favorite is how all the cams in these photos seem to have never been used lol. So much pretty shiny scratch free gear. Embarassed to even show my racks. Though I did get a new belay device and harness recently. |
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Matt Castelli wrote: Do you train on this or is this for storing your cams? Looks like they are mounted with eye bolts to biners? |
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rockklimber wrote: Train. Yup currently using heavy duty eyebolts, but switching the mounting soon. Was a pleasant surprise that most of the cams fit |
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Matt Castelli wrote: So you just tilt this at an angle, or horizontal, and then just practice jams and locks? Pretty cool. |
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Ma Ja wrote: The intent is a series of cracks that vary through every width from tips to squeeze, and that can be adjusted from vertical to horizontal. My upcoming changes will make it more stable by switching out the eyebolts on the bottom to a system that uses tnuts and bolts (less wiggle!). *edit to add: We can currently flip every set of cracks, so the size you are jamming with your hands/feet changes. Trying to figure out how to preserve this ability with the upcoming changes to the support system. |
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Matt Castelli wrote: Super effective! I've had a design in mind that would cut a repeating series of depths down the length of the board that would allow you to practice a single size over distance, but also not limit you to just one size per set. Your's is very inspiring. Thanks. |
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Here's my standard / base trad rack. I can add to or remove as needed.
If money was no object they'd be ultralight camalots, but I don't like the idea of having to retire them after 10 years. |
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Glowering wrote: For me, where I climb, would add another Yellow, Blue and Grey C4, and a biner of DMM Offsets. If I had a specific objective, lets say Ruper or Grand Giraffe in Eldo, I would get a couple larger cams to cover the OW. What you have is probably a SR for 80% of climbs out there. |
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Matt Castelli wrote: Have you considered using hinges at the bottom and turnbuckles up top to adjust the angle. You could prob mount the turnbuckles to hinges up top top. That would make it pretty sturdy Edited: with the right turnbuckles you wont need hinges up top |
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Stan Hamptonwrote: Thanks Klimber - we're looking at piano hinges, but hadn't considered turn buckles! I'll update w/ whatever we end up with. |
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Anyone have recommendations for storing your gear in a fairly pretty manner? My rack is starting to get a bit thicc and currently I change the gear I take climbing pretty much everytime I go out, so digging through a bucket is really starting to get old. Additionally, I also just want to look at my gear because I think it's pretty. I've thought about a peg board but would love to hear some other solutions too that may require significantly more work for very little gain. |
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I have found the pegboard solution to be clumsy and take longer than I'd like to get a rack together. I prefer having single racks on slings in a bin. My extra/weird gear (ballnuts, big cams, hexes etc.) Is stored on a separate sling. Its easy and quick to grab 1-3 sets of cams + any specialty gear I need for a climb. Also I mostly trad climb so I leave draws + a single rack and my nuts (gear I know I need) in the backpack. Then it's easy to add or remove a rope/more cams depending on what a partner is bringing. Edit to add: with this method it takes a minute or two to be ready to go versus 10 minutes forgetting cams and rummaging. |
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This was my solution to the conundrum of wanting my giant rack to both fit in a small area AND have it spread out so pieces aren't all jammed up on top of each other (I'm not sure how successful I was on the latter). Most gear is split between two daisy chains, the ends of which can slide on the rail to collapse down/fan out. Less-used gear goes on the back row of cord loops, and I can "part the curtains" to access that stuff. Ropes are stored on little cord loops using loop and toggle type securement. |
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greggryllswrote: +1 |
















