New Inflatable Portaledge Technology
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Just preordered, siked to test it out. Also reassuring to see some seasoned vets did too. |
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It’s rad to see this project come to the market. Nick chose to use my portaledge suspension kit for the ledge. |
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All these comments are hitting home. I will be getting to work on a double. Assuming we can recoup the development costs of the single, I think having a double by next year is doable. We already tested a double prototype made from pvc: https://www.instagram.com/freebird_rd_mountain_equipment/reel/C9DQ0JKuMha/ . Would just need to hone in on lighter and tougher materials and get a few more prototypes made. Looking forward to hearing any and all feedback on the ledges this spring too. |
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NateBwrote: That all makes sense. But maybe it doesn't have to be one or the other with a ledge this light? You have one light double with a bomber fly for the team of two or three. Flag that and use it as the mothership/storm bunker. Have a SUP-ledge or two sans fly for comfortable sleeping. The reason I was a relatively easy sell on this is that I whitewater raft a fair bit, and the drop-stitch seems way superior to the G7 POD construction, which seems more packraft-ish. Whitewater rafts and paddleboards are freaking sturdy. Packrafts are awesome, but low-pressure and much less sturdy. On their website they have pics of flagging this SUP-ledge on the Leaning Tower. My guess is that you could probably flag this on all but the slabbiest route. This sorta material tends to slide well. Maybe better than a framed ledge? [BTW..What is an AI ledge? Something stealing our jobs?] About frames. Don't you think frames are sorta painful in a lot of ways? This almost looks like it increases livable space for the same square-footage, as you tend to lose inches of living space around the frame. And no frame packs particularly well, no matter the model. One thing that is curious is the offset suspension and the free-floating middle strap. That could be mega-genius or could have some unseen complications. I am likely honeymoon-ish about the SUP-ledge, but I can sure see the potential. My 2 yen... Cheers! |
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I'll chime in about the offset D-rings and center strap. The offset D-rings are an intentional design feature to provide more support and prevent bending when standing in between the strap locations (compared to 4 equally spaced 'corner' D-rings). The center strap is left to be movable so that when its time to sleep, you move the center strap below where your lower back is positioned on the ledge and then release air, titrated to comfort. It also saves the weight of additional D-rings. The only complication I have had is if your straps get tangled, then it can be annoying to figure out, but its not unlike tangles with other portaledges. To avoid this, cinch the straps down close to the ledge every time you pack it up. There will be instructions in the manual that comes with the ledge. And yea, the SUP material is freaking sturdy! I think the Multiledge will last a lifetime for most big wallers (not the usual business tactic seen in the current age of everything being disposable). |
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If anyone wants to sell a G7.... |
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Nick Powellwrote: After what I imagine will be a very positive rollout of the single ledge, here's hoping you can get a double out soon! |
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I'm broke as shit and if you make a double I will save my sheckels and find a way to buy it. I would be stoked as fuck on that with a fly. |
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John Shultzwrote: I hovered on that for a moment myself. I then realized that he wrote “Al framed ledge”—that’s capital A lower case L, short for aluminum. |
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Following. These seem awesome. |
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If you develop an inflatable double ledge, I would buy it in a heartbeat. Probably saving my pennies until that happens. Keep up the great work! |
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Kevin DeWeese wrote: G7 Pod is probably good for more than you’d feel comfortable putting on there. BITD when I made your Supertaco I didn’t even own a bartacker, but I would wager that those 3 point zig zags hold up and the webbing breaks first. |
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Kevin DeWeese wrote: Oh I see what you mean. I have been admiring how many designs and engineering that took place 40-100 years ago are still relevant today. Fish/A5 designs with 400D packcloth/Cordura, the Browning M2, the Schrader Valve. |
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High Mountain Gearwrote: Drop stitch technology is in that list. Goodyear developed it for inflatable airplane wings in the 1950s. |
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Great to see innovation in climbing gear, as usual led by specialist small manufacturers, John Middendorf would thoroughly approve. Thanks for the paper on drop-stitch, very interesting and all new to me. I hope the manufacturing and business side works out for you. Outsourcing fly and straps to experienced manufactures sounds like a good move. For a classic wall with some natural ledges taking two or three nights - like The Nose - one or two inflatable singles per team could be a good plan. I imagine many people looking for a portaledge have routes like this in mind. Perhaps this also applies to some super-alpine routes but I’m a complete theoretician here. Echoing others, for 4+ night routes I preferred a double. Increasingly this will be for hard free ascents rather than vertical camping trips. The benefits of having somewhere to recover properly between redpoint goes and on rest days compensates for the extra weight. Non-BD athletes should be very interested. |
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How compatible is the multiledge with G7 pod? Side by side orientation? Top/bottom orientation?
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It is compatible. I haven’t personally tested it on a big wall, but it works well in more sterile test environments. I posted videos on our instagram page. @freebird_rd_mountain_equipment |
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Nick, I've preordered one. Very excited! Thanks for sharing your work with the community. Commercializing a product like this for a niche market is so much work. Good luck! I'll update here when I get mine |
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It is much more work than I anticipated... Kudos to anyone who takes an idea all the way to market. And thanks for your order Grayson! I am looking forward to seeing all the reviews and feedback. Also I hope to see some Multiledges out in Yosemite when I'm there this season! By the way, one of the big perks to inflatable portaledges is that they double as beds for camp 4 and wherever base camp is. You can also use these effectively as crash pads if you happen to do any bouldering in between big wall missions. |
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Can anyone confirm how well they work as a SUP with a haul bag on them? |






