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Photos of BEAUTIFUL HARDWARE pt2

Mr Rogers · · Pollock Pines and Bay area CA · Joined Aug 2010 · Points: 77

Galvanization (Zinc) can stain the rock, and kill lichens. It's super obvious on granite, but shows on other rocks types as well.
It's more than just corrosion, we need to think about the whole impact when installing hardware. Zinc plated metals, IMO, should not be used outside.

Not the best angle of this particular anchor....but see the bright white streaks in the image below? Zinc impact.



Edit to not take up more space:
PSA

Past User · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Nov 2007 · Points: 1,114
Mr Rogerswrote:

Galvanization (Zinc) can stain the rock, and kill lichens. It's super obvious on granite, but shows on other rocks types as well.
It's more than just corrosion, we need to think about the whole impact when installing hardware. Zinc plated metals, IMO, should not be used outside.

Not the best angle of this particular anchor....but see the bright white streaks in the image below? Zinc impact.

Did you miss the part in the above post about removing the zinc plating with vinegar and then painting the bare carbon steel? Or perhaps this is  just a a general PSA?

Past User · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Nov 2007 · Points: 1,114

Belay station was relocated to a better location a few feet right of this original 30 year old manker.

Alex Morano · · Colorado · Joined Jun 2017 · Points: 1,437

Here’s an anchor I recently installed. 8mm lappas solid leg glue ins with a 12mm lappas captive eye biner on the top bolt and a 10mm Climbing taiwan captive carabiner below.

Adam W · · TX/Nevada · Joined Dec 2019 · Points: 532

Hanger color match next to a piece of chert from the wall they’ll be going on.

Past User · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Nov 2007 · Points: 1,114

That’s an amazing camo job!

 (but that’s not chert)

Adam W · · TX/Nevada · Joined Dec 2019 · Points: 532

What’s the term for it?  I’ve always heard it called chert on Nevada linestone

Past User · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Nov 2007 · Points: 1,114

I could be wrong! (But I did used to work as a geologist) What crag is it from? Pics? It appears very igneous… pegmatitic even… it that from a limestone crag in NV? 

Adam W · · TX/Nevada · Joined Dec 2019 · Points: 532

Currently an undisclosed location crag that I haven’t got pictures of in Nevada but similar rock bands exist all around at Mt Potosi or Charleston.  Grey linestone with mainly horizontal and sometimes vertical blobby banding of darker rock like thi.

Tal M · · Denver, CO · Joined Dec 2018 · Points: 6,462

A new one from a multipitch today where minimizing visual impact is a top priority

Trash Garbage · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Sep 2018 · Points: 387

Great paint job or fascinating SS corrosion?

climber pat · · Las Cruces NM · Joined Feb 2006 · Points: 301

With these truly impressive camouflage jobs does anyone worry that climbers will be unable to spot bolts and miss clips while climbing or looking for rappel anchors?  Are we going a bit too far?

Tal M · · Denver, CO · Joined Dec 2018 · Points: 6,462
climber patwrote:

With these truly impressive camouflage jobs does anyone worry that climbers will be unable to spot bolts and miss clips while climbing or looking for rappel anchors?  Are we going a bit too far?

I’ve had people miss the bolts on my routes a few times. It certainly puts the onus on the developer to put the bolts at expected places as much as possible. I will say, they’re much more obvious from below than from straight on or above. I think it would be very hard to miss an anchor, with its additional hardware and doubling of bolts, vs missing a bolt on lead.

If I’m running it out, I try to use a paint job that is relatively easy to see from below but is just dark/matte enough to break up the reflective quality of uncamoed steel so you can’t see them from hundreds of yards away.

Mr Rogers · · Pollock Pines and Bay area CA · Joined Aug 2010 · Points: 77

I have absolutely climbed passed well camo'd fixed hardware and noticed when rapping/lowering back down. If it's a decently bolted sport route I can usually tell when I should be at the next pro. However, if it's more run out or traditionally bolted, it's more of an issue to not see the pro as you kinda need those little shits for navigation sometimes if you're not familiar with the route or it wanders. I thinks thats where bolt counts can help deduce if there should something coming up on a pitch....and of course looking at a topo is über helpful, IMO, if there is one.

I don't think super well disguised gear is a problem, just has caveats, just like shiny hardware. Both have impact, but in very different ways. And to be clear, I have had un camo'd hardware right in front of my face and still manage to not see it..... So I'm likely the biggest issue in the equation, to be honest.

old5ten · · Sunny Slopes + Berkeley, CA · Joined Sep 2012 · Points: 5,881
climber patwrote:

With these truly impressive camouflage jobs does anyone worry that climbers will be unable to spot bolts and miss clips while climbing or looking for rappel anchors?  Are we going a bit too far?

the bolts don't even have to be camouflaged.  this is actually quite a problem on runout routes in tuolumne...

bmdhacks · · Bellingham, WA · Joined Jan 2012 · Points: 1,831
Trash Garbagewrote:

Great paint job or fascinating SS corrosion?

That's amazing.
I dare somebody to replace the rap anchors on Royal Arches with these so we watch the crowds penjiing around trying to find them.

Trash Garbage · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Sep 2018 · Points: 387
bmdhackswrote:

That's amazing.
I dare somebody to replace the rap anchors on Royal Arches with these so we watch the crowds penjiing around trying to find them.

Lol it think these should go straight to the junk yard. Using titanium by the sea isn't just a myth after all.

Andrew Whitmore · · Montana · Joined Jun 2010 · Points: 640

Quartzite. 12x95mm SS Wedge Anchor from Team Tough via Europe and Fixe Hardware 316 hanger. Treated with <30 secs light propane. Torqued to spec.

Stick clip first bolt, or ye gonna die. 
M Sprague · · New England · Joined Nov 2006 · Points: 5,174
Andrew Whitmorewrote:

Quartzite. 12x95mm SS Wedge Anchor from Team Tough via Europe and Fixe Hardware 316 hanger. Treated with <30 secs light propane. Torqued to spec.

I used to use those hangers because they were stronger than most others available and have those knurls on the back that help set the hanger , but man they chew up aluminum carabineers, even steel quicklinks. I ended up almost exclusively using glue-ins partially to avoid hangers

Heliodor Jalba · · Montserrat, ES · Joined Apr 2018 · Points: 8,143

About as good as it gets for installing a Lappas Corkscrew bolt! My favorite glue tool after trying out a bunch of stuff is to use index cards. One piece to catch glue that's dripping out, and the other piece to move the glue around with precision, and to clean any extra glue off the metal (as you can see in the bottom left section of the bolt).

A two-pointed drill bit, either 10mm or 3/8 inch works wonders. The hole is just slightly bigger than the nozzle so that the nozzle gets pushed out by the glue and you don't have to guess if you filled the hole or not. The two-pointed head is great for gently using the hammer mode of the drill to make narrow notches that then make it easy to detail the glue and leave minimal glue showing on the rock. (don't mind the red color!)

Guideline #1: Don't be a jerk.

Fixed Hardware: Bolts & Anchors
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