Best Practice: Extended Rappel vs Belay Loop Rappel?
|
|
In the scenario where I want my friction hitch to engage as my brake hand, I want to know without a doubt that it’s going to do its job. For that reason I always extend and use a back up if I think there’s a chance I will want it. This can take less than a minute to set up with common materials if you practice just a bit. The extra control of having a better braking angle is an added bonus. On some short raps with almost all the variables known, I may choose to rap directly off my belay loop with no back up. |
|
|
Danny Herrerawrote: Ugh seems like a bunch of gumbies ripped the brake handle open. |
|
|
Samuel Parkerwrote:
And more directly to the OP’s original question. It depends? 95% of the time I use a prusik on my leg loop and don’t extend. If I’m rapping with a heavy load or an injured partner I extend my device and put the third hand on my belay loop |
|
|
JCMwrote: I think it's probably both. A couple examples. A), i was at jtree a while back and watched a young woman try to rappel for at least 15 minutes. She had kind of a clusterfuck and couldn't figure out what she should unclip or reclip. She kept unclipping stuff and then freaking out abd reclipping it to something else B) one of my friends was climbing with another very experienced partner who had recently switched over to the extended setup. They were up a ways and getting pounded by a thunderstorm, so they started rapping. The woman he was with kept having a hard time at each rap. It's too long, it's too short, it's too this, it's too that. He was getting prettt pissed because she was really slowing things down with all the fadfing around. People are always telling me it's just as fast and so much better, but when i watch them it looks like it sucks. Take for example those cases where you are doing the belly-slither-offa-tower-down-onto-that-anchor. That turns into a lot bigger drop when your belay device is extended. No thanks... |
|
|
jdejacewrote: If you have to do a lot of rappelling, it is really nice to have the first person working on setting up the next rappel, as opposed to standing there holding onto the ropes for the duration of the second rappel. I do agree that the fireman works great in a lot of other scenarios though.
Come on. It took 15 minutes to start the rappel, and you're seriously trying to blame that on her belay device being 10 inches further from her belay loop? That makes about as much sense as blaming it on the color of her shirt. |
|
|
Kyle Tarrywrote: Totally agree with that. I think a Fireman's is warranted in poor conditions or if the rap is not the most straightforward. But if it's pretty standard and your second doesn't need the back up, it's much better to start feeding the rope through and setting up the next rap |
|
|
Mikey Schaeferwrote: Gonna steal this from ya Mikey! Seems like a really useful technique for multiple raps (or when there happen to be trees you're trying to avoid - I somehow always throw em into branches...) Does bringing em with ya change how you throw/flake your ropes? Or do you just saddle bag them? |
|
|
Extending takes a whole of, maybe, 15 seconds more to set up. A few reasons I personally prefer it quite a bit more:
|
|
|
I've been using a Petzl dual connect adjust for an extended rap/pas, which looks like the picture below and its super comfortable. This picture doesn't display a real world situation where the anchor and the atc would be at chest height. but its close enough. this is a big step up from using a 120 cm sling with a knot in the middle for the atc and the end loop for my pas biner. |
|
|
gri gri all day and night. |
|
|
Extending the rappel device is mandatory if you have long hair. |
|
|
june mwrote: Wouldn't it be the opposite of this? You would want it far away from your face |
|
|
I’ll say I almost always extend my rappel. The only valid, thought out reason as to why. It gets it above my beard. I’ve gotta to the bottom of too many rappels with a fist full of hair lodged in my atc or just gone completely. |
|
|
Nathan Bilthuiswrote: Exactly, its above my hair, braid comes down past my waist |
|
|
june mwrote: Don't want this to happen: m.youtube.com/watch?v=Mj83X… |
|
|
Kyle Tarrywrote: No, it wasn't the distance (i dont think anyway, i could be wrong though). It seemed like she was just confused about which thingy was keeping her from falling to her death. |
|
|
june mwrote: Extending the rappel device is even more moronic if you have long hair. Spoiler alert, the device is a lot closer to your hair... |
|
|
Extending your belay device doesn't make one lick of difference about which "thingy" is connecting you to the anchor, so why would you even bring it up? slimwrote: It seems really wild that you are telling a women who has long hair and has tested both techniques that her assessment is "moronic." How long is your hair, Slim? |
|
|
My first partner/mentor 30 years ago, a German mountaineer and physicist, taught me things (rightly or wrongly) that remain almost hard-coded in my approach to climbing. One of those things was: minimize links in the chain and therefore potential points of failure. Every time I see an extended rappel setup, I just see an added link/point of failure. Yeah, I know there’s a backup, but there’s still another link. We all have our justifications for doing what we do…that one is mine, and why I don’t extend. Plus, I haven’t found an overwhelming problem I’ve needed to solve in rappelling methods over 3 decades - so, if it ain’t broke… |
|
|
slimwrote: Maybe it's closer to your hair....maybe not. Belay loops, belay devices, slings, biners, etc are all pretty much a fixed size. The bodies they are rigged on vary. A lot. For starters, women wear harnesses differently than men. Waist is higher. Women are usually shorter. This means, a rappel on my 4'11" height is probably way different with where the device is than it is for you. Extending the rappel gets it up above my head, still easily in reach, and out of range of....well, everything between my waist and farther north, okay? YMMV, but just because something is so for you, doesn't make it so for everyone. At least no one is bitchin at you for bring cranky and an admin, lol! :-) |





