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sungam
Aug 28, 2012, 3:34 PM
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Registered: Jun 24, 2004
Posts: 26804
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A metric fucking shit tonne. Dear lawdy that thing slapped me in the thigh incredibly hard. Luckily I landed on my pad or my tailbone wouldn't feel too great either. Don't pass off little nicks in your line as "no big deal" if you are going to bounce a lardass on it.
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USnavy
Aug 29, 2012, 5:57 AM
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Registered: Nov 6, 2007
Posts: 2667
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That is what you get for using those piece of shit Gibbon nooblines. Trade up to a professional line. Get some Type-18, Mantra or Spider Silk line. The 1" Spider Silk is rated for 67kN, or about 3x what those crappy Gibbon lines hold. Even the weakest of those three options, the Type-18, is still twice as strong as normal climb-spec tubular webbing. http://www.balancecommunity.com/Slackline-Webbing
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sungam
Aug 29, 2012, 12:38 PM
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Registered: Jun 24, 2004
Posts: 26804
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Pfffft, I don't use a gibbon. Way to make assumptions n00bert. I use the same 1" primitive I bought in Moab when I was travelling around the US ('cept I now use a linelocker ring instead of a clove hitch). I am on the lookout for some good deals on better webbing though. I don't feel comfortable bouncing on my line anymore. Lot's of little nicks in it. Where it snapped was seriously a tiny little nick.
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abrock5
Aug 29, 2012, 2:35 PM
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Registered: Aug 22, 2011
Posts: 24
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"A metric shit ton" is the best thing I've read on the internet in a long time. Well done sir.
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dynosnore
Sep 11, 2012, 8:29 PM
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Registered: Jul 17, 2012
Posts: 18
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Haha, have a giant welt you could take a picture of? Would be funny to see. Sorry about your line though, sounds real painful.
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petsfed
Sep 11, 2012, 10:26 PM
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Registered: Sep 25, 2002
Posts: 8599
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I used to have a scar below my kneecap from where a biner hit me when the anchor sling on the other end of the line failed as I was tightening it. Its long since faded (6 years of additional scars have covered it completely), but it stays pretty clear in my memory. Afterwards, I started using 2" for tree slings, instead of 9/16", and inspected all of my stuff on a much more regular basis.
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sungam
Sep 11, 2012, 10:31 PM
Post #7 of 7
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Registered: Jun 24, 2004
Posts: 26804
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petsfed wrote: I used to have a scar below my kneecap from where a biner hit me when the anchor sling on the other end of the line failed as I was tightening it. Its long since faded (6 years of additional scars have covered it completely), but it stays pretty clear in my memory. Afterwards, I started using 2" for tree slings, instead of 9/16", and inspected all of my stuff on a much more regular basis. I opened the parcel containing my new 2000kg spansets and shackles literally 3 minutes ago. Previously I was using like 12mm dyneema and before that I was using 3 old slings I had found, one 10mm mammut sling (it had previously been cut and I had water-knotted it) and 2 fat nylon slings girthed together. It took a while but I am glad I ended up with the spansets without any real drama. Next up on my buy list is banana line lockers rather then chain-link style. after that I feel my rig will be as burly as it can possibly be.
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