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winkwinklambonini
Sep 17, 2002, 3:13 AM
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Registered: Sep 17, 2002
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I'm curious how other people rack up. This is because I recently changed my system, and it works really well. I tied gear loops on my shoulder sling with spectra chord and semi-rigid tubing(vise grips work to maintain good tension so the tubing ends up nice and tight), because I tied them, they are adjustable. I also added one long one on the left side. Draws are on the left, gear on the right starting with stoppers and small cams which end up in the middle of my chest(wicked accessable). Lockers, Chordelette, and any doubles I have on my harness. Unlike racking on a harness, now I can reach any piece with either hand easily.
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stevematthys
Sep 18, 2002, 2:21 AM
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Registered: Sep 13, 2000
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i have one of those metolius slings with the sewn gear loops, i rack my stoppers and tri-cams on the first loop. on the second loop i rack cams. on the thrid loop i rack runners and long webbing. on the forth loop i rack quick draws. then i keep extra locking biners, nut tool, etc.... on my harness
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farmerc
Sep 18, 2002, 2:38 AM
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Registered: May 3, 2002
Posts: 184
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Two gear slings. one over each shoulder (obviously ) On my right I keep the set of nuts, all of my hexes, 12" slings and my webolette. On my left, I have All of my tricams and spare biners, and (on that rare occassion when i am borrowing a set) cams. I put the 24" and 48" slings over my shoulder. Nothing on my harness except maybe a waterbottle or descent shoes.
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joemor
Sep 18, 2002, 7:17 AM
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Registered: Dec 3, 2001
Posts: 609
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all pro and draws on my harness. pro on the front loops, and draws on the back. slings over the sholder. joe
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rrrADAM
Sep 18, 2002, 7:24 AM
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Registered: Dec 19, 1999
Posts: 17553
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Everything goes on my harness.
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climbingcowboy
Sep 18, 2002, 7:46 AM
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Registered: Jun 24, 2002
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I use a Metolius multi-loop double D sling I would link it to you but dont know how. This works great for all the routes I've been on. I rack small nuts and cams in front to largeer cams in back, if I need a #3 and up (BD) cams those go on my harness , on the separte rap-around loop on the sling I put ovals and lockers , on my harness I also have draws and my cordalette. then of coruse slings over the shoulder. The puls for me having it on a sling vrs pro on my harness is being able to see it which = less time screwing around which = not falling.
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chuckd278
Sep 18, 2002, 12:23 PM
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Registered: Jun 23, 2002
Posts: 156
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All on my harness and runners on my shoulders. Most climbs in my area are only 25 to 100 feet in length and all the gear I need can fit on my harness. With racking gear on shoulder slings I found that when the route gets pitched back it's harder for me to get to all of my gear. I rack my harness depending on how I will need to place gear. Many routes in my area are protected by left or right facing cracks and in order to place gear you only have your one hand free. Chuck
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rck_climber
Sep 18, 2002, 1:02 PM
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Registered: Aug 28, 2001
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My partner and I use a Singing Rock gear sling with three loops. Generally, we group all the medium-sized gear (nuts 6-9, mid cams and hexes) on the first loop, the largest gear (nuts 10-13, big cams and hexes) on the second loop (this keeps the sling hanging straight on our side since all weight is in the middle and reduces the "swing" of the sling around your body), and the smallest gear (nuts 1-5 and micro-cams) on the back loop. It's worked very well for us since the sling doesn't swing around your neck and body as much and all of the gear is grouped by size so you can quickly and easily find the right piece. Hope this helps. Mick
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toobigtoclimb
Sep 18, 2002, 2:42 PM
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Registered: Dec 14, 2001
Posts: 426
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Try to get everything on my harness unless it's a long route. Then Metolius sling, nuts in front, cams next, misc. crap last.
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radistrad
Sep 18, 2002, 3:37 PM
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Registered: Feb 25, 2002
Posts: 800
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I get it all on my harness! Small cams up front large cams towards the rear. Each cam has a carabiner on it and if I know I am going to place a particular cam I will put a 12" (1/2 shoulder) sling on the cam with a clip in 'biner on the sling. I rack my stoppers, cordalett, cleaning tool and extra biners at the rear or my harness. I always carry a dozen or so shoulder slings each with a clip in 'biner. I have an Acr Teryx Targa harness, its gear loops are hugh!
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skloppen
Sep 18, 2002, 8:20 PM
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Registered: Jul 14, 2002
Posts: 28
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I'm just a beginner, so prehaps it's not the best racking but, Everything goes on a modified black diamond double sling. I have attached five (I think) gear loops on each side to keep the gear from sliding arround and more organized. right side (front to back): nuts on 2 biners, tricams, hexed on 2 biners, quickdraws, free biners left side (front to back): cams on 5 bieners, a few quickdraws, cordalette and lockers for anchors slings accross from left sholder to right side. ATC, nut tool, etc on harness.
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munckee
Oct 6, 2002, 4:07 PM
Post #12 of 19
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Registered: Aug 28, 2001
Posts: 455
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I'm with the "everything on the harness" crowd. I can't stand having gear swinging around in my way on a shoulder sling. I have heard a solution to this: clip a biner on draw to the very front of your shoulder sling and then to the front loop on your harness to keep it from swinging around, but I still don't like the way it feels. Anyway, I usually rack cams front right smallest to largest, stoppers and tricams smallest to largets front left and then split draws and lockers, etc between the two back loops. Slightly crowded, but it all fits.
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tanner
Oct 6, 2002, 6:04 PM
Post #13 of 19
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Registered: Apr 28, 2002
Posts: 491
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short and long slings over my shoulder. nuts on the front right gear loop, Larger nuts on one beiner, smaller on another cams and tricams on the left. draws and loose beiners on the back. I run a short sling from my the belay loop of my harness with a locker clipped on one of my gear loops
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transse
Oct 7, 2002, 7:43 PM
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Registered: Jul 10, 2002
Posts: 67
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I rack all the gear on my harness. I put nuts front right, followed by a set of BD cams racked small to large. On the left I rack a set of TCUs small to large with any doubles of BD cams, followed by tricams. Draws/tripled slings split between back 2 loops. This works really well because you have basically a full set of cams on either side of your body. Although you rarely carry all of that gear on any pitch. Jake
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stoutclimb1
Oct 7, 2002, 8:16 PM
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Registered: Oct 4, 2002
Posts: 1261
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I hate gear on my shoulders, keep it on the harness, but thats just my opinion hey whatever floats your boat right!
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bradbaker
Oct 7, 2002, 8:46 PM
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Registered: Sep 9, 2002
Posts: 65
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It Depends (TM) On long routes where quick gear changes are beneficial, I'll rack most of the stuff that I'll exchange on a single shoulder sling (nuts up front, followed by cams, then misc). Most of the slings still go on my harness. Belay gear goes on the back loops. Same goes for anything with a chimney where I'll want to move the gear around (left to right, front to back, etc). For shorter routes where efficiency of the gear change doesn't matter as much, I'll often rack cams on the front loops of my harness, slings and belay gear on the rear loops and nuts and other misc items on my gear loop. If I really know what pro I'll need for a short route, I just rack on my harness and leave the sling in the pack. Generally, I rack each cam on its own biner and will extend it with a draw/sling if necessary. For nuts, I rack 4-6 nuts per biner. Brad Baker
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reno
Oct 7, 2002, 8:53 PM
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Registered: Oct 30, 2001
Posts: 18283
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Majority on the harness with slings over the shoulder and extra biners on one of those slings. Harness as such: Nuts and Tri-Cams on the front left loop. Draws, lockers, and cordlette on the back left. Small Friends on the front right, larger cams on the back right. Spare biners, as mentioned, are on a sling over a shoulder. Best, JRB (Edited for a typo.) [ This Message was edited by: reno on 2002-10-07 13:54 ]
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jbrd528
Oct 7, 2002, 9:07 PM
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Registered: Oct 4, 2002
Posts: 108
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It is alot easier to have all your gear racked on a gear sling when you are swaping leads. My partner and I generally like to climb longer routes where we swap the leads. The only thing we keep on our harnesses is your own personal gear (belay/rap devise, several lockers, nut tool, cordalet). This way it saves time at each belay. Also if you have to lead with a pack it is hard to get at the gear that might be racked on your back gear loops.
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tanner
Oct 8, 2002, 10:13 PM
Post #19 of 19
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Registered: Apr 28, 2002
Posts: 491
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Racking on a gear sling makes sense for swiching leads because sorting it out on the harness is a pain.
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