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Tip - Speeding up a group rappel
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johngo


Sep 24, 2005, 5:21 AM
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Tip - Speeding up a group rappel
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When climbing with more than four folks, most us have found that rapping with this crowd can take up a LOT of time – esp. if you have a few newbies along. Here’s a crafty rope trick I thought of recently that makes the process much faster. This has been field tested several times, and works nicely. (If you never rap with a group of more than 2, you can stop reading here =^)

The big time suck in rapping, especially with beginners, is that people can take a L O T of time getting ready to go – getting the rope rigged, double checking the setup, moving into position, etc. If one person can be doing all this, i.e., being in the “on deck circle” while another is rapping, the total rap time can almost be cut in half. Here’s how to do it.

Thread the rope as for a normal rap. Tie a fig 8 on a bight about 1 foot down from the anchor on each side of the hanging rope, and clip each resulting loop to the anchor with a locker. You now have two fixed single lines, allowing one of two things: one climber can rap at a time on a single line while another is rigging their rope and getting ready to rap the moment the climber ahead of them is on the ground, or (bomber anchor only!) two climbers can rap at once on each strand of the rope. The last climber unties the knots, cleans the biners, and raps normally.

To add extra friction for more control with a single strand, just clip a biner to your leg loop (gate up and out) and clip the brake strand through it. To add more friction, bring your brake hand up in front of you.

For those of us who lead/guide groups, I hope you find this useful. Your comments are appreciated. Here’s a photo to hopefully clarify, and yes, it’s the 5.11 grade IV called The Side of the House:

http://outdoordads.org/...limbing/grouprap.jpg

Le'ts hope this generates some good disucssion. If anyone sees something lethally wrong with this rig, please do us all a favor by pointing it out. If you find it useful, give that a mention as well.

Wind at your back,
johnGo


curt


Sep 24, 2005, 5:30 AM
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In reply to:
When climbing with more than four folks, most us have found that rapping with this crowd can take up a LOT of time – esp. if you have a few newbies along. Here’s a crafty rope trick I thought of recently that makes the process much faster. This has been field tested several times, and works nicely. (If you never rap with a group of more than 2, you can stop reading here =^)

The big time suck in rapping, especially with beginners, is that people can take a L O T of time getting ready to go – getting the rope rigged, double checking the setup, moving into position, etc. If one person can be doing all this, i.e., being in the “on deck circle” while another is rapping, the total rap time can almost be cut in half. Here’s how to do it.

Thread the rope as for a normal rap. Tie a fig 8 on a bight about 1 foot down from the anchor on each side of the hanging rope, and clip each resulting loop to the anchor with a locker. You now have two fixed single lines, allowing one of two things: one climber can rap at a time on a single line while another is rigging their rope and getting ready to rap the moment the climber ahead of them is on the ground, or (bomber anchor only!) two climbers can rap at once on each strand of the rope. The last climber unties the knots, cleans the biners, and raps normally.

To add extra friction for more control with a single strand, just clip a biner to your leg loop (gate up and out) and clip the brake strand through it. To add more friction, bring your brake hand up in front of you.

For those of us who lead/guide groups, I hope you find this useful. Your comments are appreciated. Here’s a photo to hopefully clarify, and yes, it’s the 5.11 grade IV called The Side of the House:

http://outdoordads.org/...limbing/grouprap.jpg

Le'ts hope this generates some good disucssion. If anyone sees something lethally wrong with this rig, please do us all a favor by pointing it out. If you find it useful, give that a mention as well.

Wind at your back,
johnGo

It looks like it might be terribly difficult to pull your rope down. :lol:

Curt


anykineclimb


Sep 24, 2005, 5:50 AM
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Don't bother with the knots. just double rap 8^)

In reply to:
The big time suck in rapping, especially with beginners, is that people can take a L O T of time getting ready to go...
In all seriousness, do you really want to be rushing beginners on the most dangerous aspect of climbing??? Take your time, teach them the proper, SAFE way to descend. If you don't have that sort of patience, maybe you shouldn't bother with beginners.


Partner ctardi


Sep 24, 2005, 6:33 AM
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Just out of curiosity, how to you have a fourth class, 5.11?


gush


Sep 24, 2005, 6:34 AM
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I think that your thinking in this matter is very ingenuitive.
I know exactly what you mean when you say that rapping with a party of four can take a lot of time, and i have wished many times that there was a faster more efficient way.

I don't think that your thinking is a matter of you being impatient at all!! your just wanting to boost efficiency in a normal rappelling situation, and the system you suggested also supports more one on one attention and teaching time while the others are rappelling. Your idea is very smart cause it can also make getting of a mountain due to weather or some other unforeseen problems (rock fall, injured climber, rap out time, etc.) quicker without compromising safety.

The things i potentially see that could create a problem with your system is this. Although you have clipped your caribeaners to the shelf of your system, you only clipped each side to one anchor point, which will minimize equalization of the system and create a huge shock load if one anchor were to blow. I would suggest moving one figure eight on a bight to the power point and the second i would clip to both anchors of the shelf. that way you keep equalization minimize clutter and don't have any shock load in the system.

another way in which I try to speed up a repel in those situations is buy doing a guides repel. What I do is I thread the rope though the anchor like normal. Then I take my repel device and hook it up on both ropes. I would then get everyone else to hook up there belay devices in between my device and the anchor. This allows me to check every ones repel device before i repel myself. After checking everyone i would explain that they are going to feel me pulling a little on the rope, but to stand in line with my pull as to not fight it but allow the anchor to take the weight instead of themselves. i would then repel down setup the next anchor tie the ropes to the anchor with plenty of slack, take myself of repel and yell off repel. This would signal the next guy in line to disconnect his securing line and come on down. This system is great because now i can give them a fire mans belay by holding there brake if needed.

None the less great thinking I think it might be something I will use in the future


superbum


Sep 24, 2005, 6:38 AM
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Wow...I like it a lot, very cool, and simple to boot! The only problem I see is untieing those figure eights everytime...maybe replace with a bowline on a bight?

If there are just three people, you could ditch the knots entirely and have the first two double rap (one on each side) while the third waits up top with the ropes already threaded through his/her device (extended off the harness w/ a sling) to prevent slippage if one goes too far too fast.


veganboyjosh


Sep 24, 2005, 7:44 AM
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In reply to:
The only problem I see is untieing those figure eights everytime...maybe replace with a bowline on a bight?

clove hitches?


overlord


Sep 24, 2005, 9:12 AM
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yes, bowlines are about the same pita as fig8s. but clove hitches would work fine. and id use lockers :wink:


slhappy


Sep 24, 2005, 2:09 PM
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In reply to:
Just out of curiosity, how to you have a fourth class, 5.11?

that would be Grade IV. I think I saw a discussion of grade, class, rating,etc... on this site somewhere before.

Back on topic...don't rush beginners, teach then right and let their experience speed them up safely.

For experienced rapellers (groups of 4) just double rappel. Very fast.


asandh


Sep 24, 2005, 3:51 PM
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:)


topher


Sep 24, 2005, 4:01 PM
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ok what you have build is ok but if you are really worreid about time why would you not just do a simel rap... im not going to explaine it, but its fast and then you can still pull the rope.. with your system you could just tie the rope off and go off the 2 single lines..


chemicalclimber


Sep 24, 2005, 4:24 PM
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I don't see how this sacrifices safety. The only way things are sped up is by the fact that you can be setting up someones rap device while someone else is actually rappelling. The actual process of threading your device, checking biners, leaning back to make sure your setup holds you before unclipping, etc. will not be sped up in any way. It's just that you can have more than one thing going on at once.

Nice idea, johngo.

Something you could do to save yourself even more time is thread the part of the rope that is currently fed through the quicklink through the chains or rap hangars (leaving the rest of the setup the same) then when it's time for the last person to rap, untie the 2 figure eights (or bowlines or cloves or whatever), then your rope is all ready to go so you can pull it afterwards (and you don't have to pull up half the rope to thread it, since its already done).


Partner tim


Sep 24, 2005, 5:50 PM
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In reply to:
Just out of curiosity, how to you have a fourth class, 5.11?

Grade IV, 5.11 == a 5.11 that a reasonably competent party would take a full day to complete (such as Positive Vibrations on the Incredible Hulk). There are plenty of Grade VI free climbs (Free Rider, Golden Gate) and even a Grade VII (Azeem Ridge)... commitment has little to do with difficulty.

Back to the topic at hand: Seeing as to how few climbs feature aluminum siding (see Figure 1), we can safely conclude that this was a clever ruse to flush out those unfamiliar with commitment grades ;-)


styndall


Sep 24, 2005, 6:16 PM
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Why not just tie a single 8 on a bight in the center of the rope, and clip that to your anchor? It would be simpler, and there'd be less extension possible should one leg of the anchor fail. You'd lose a little of the separation between strands that your method gives, but an inch or two wouldn't make that much of a difference.

Or is there something I'm missing?

Edit: Here's my method:
http://www.arches.uga.edu/~geist9/doublerap.jpg

Photo from Shower Curtain, 5.7 C2 VI, Village Apartments Peak, Georgia


dirtineye


Sep 24, 2005, 6:40 PM
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In reply to:
Why not just tie a single 8 on a bight in the center of the rope, and clip that to your anchor? It would be simpler, and there'd be less extension possible should one leg of the anchor fail. You'd lose a little of the separation between strands that your method gives, but an inch or two wouldn't make that much of a difference.

Or is there something I'm missing?

Edit: Here's my method:
http://www.arches.uga.edu/~geist9/doublerap.jpg

Photo from Shower Curtain, 5.7 C2 VI, Village Apartments Peak, Georgia

HEHEHE, this is what I'd do myself. I wondered if anyone would come up wiht this better solution for the same problem.

Ix-nay on the ope-ray eaking-bray.


veganboyjosh


Sep 24, 2005, 6:55 PM
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In reply to:
In reply to:
Why not just tie a single 8 on a bight in the center of the rope, and clip that to your anchor? It would be simpler, and there'd be less extension possible should one leg of the anchor fail. You'd lose a little of the separation between strands that your method gives, but an inch or two wouldn't make that much of a difference.

Or is there something I'm missing?

Edit: Here's my method:
http://www.arches.uga.edu/~geist9/doublerap.jpg

Photo from Shower Curtain, 5.7 C2 VI, Village Apartments Peak, Georgia

HEHEHE, this is what I'd do myself. I wondered if anyone would come up wiht this better solution for the same problem.

Ix-nay on the ope-ray eaking-bray.

this method requires the last person rapping to clip the rope completely from the anchor, before clipping it back in to rap. the op's method does not.

granted, there are methods to avoid dropping the rope (8 on a bight clipped to harness), but that takes time, and the top method avoids that altogether.


tenesmus


Sep 24, 2005, 8:00 PM
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This seems more applicable to a canyoneering setting with a group. I like both methods. I'll probably use the first with clove hitches on the biners. Does this make sense to you guys?


veganboyjosh


Sep 24, 2005, 8:11 PM
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what kinda knot is that "power point"? it looks like a figure 8 or an overhand, but one of those bends has what appears to be 4 strands. the two legs of the anchor look doubled, but the loop looks like it's only two strands, not four.


johngo


Sep 24, 2005, 8:43 PM
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Hello all,

Wowzer, there's some good ideas being tossed around on this, just as I hoped! I'll try to address a few concerns/ideas that have been raised.

- I don't feel that this sacrifices safety in a significant manner. It's more a matter of moving with maximum efficiency. This cuts the down time to almost nil on the rap, and only adds the slight curveball of rapping on a single line. If anyone rapping is not comfortable with this, then they simply rap on the strands normally. (I don't teach boy scouts, BTW.)

- I've simulrapped in certain situations, but it's not something I've been very comfortable with. Definetely a technique for very experienced folks.

- Wow, that shower curtain route looks sweet! The rig you have works fine if you are rapping on biners that you plan on leaving behind, but not so well if you have a rap ring or are through webbing. In that case, the last person would have to break it all down, pull up half the rope, thread the anchor and toss the rope, which is not very efficient. With my rig, the middle of the rope is already running through the anchor, so the last person can clean the biners and untie the knots (in about 30 seconds) and rap normally.

- Agreed, a clove in place of the fig 8 is a good option. I've not had a big problem untying the fig 8, but a clove would be easier.

- Agreed, there is a potential for shock loading with the rig as pictured. In practice I clip both biners into the powerpoint. (I tried taking several pictures of this and they all looked too cluttered to explain well, so I moved the biners to the shelf for the photo.) I should remember for my future posts the importance of being specific with pictures.

- On the grade issue: Class 4 is moderate scrambling, Grade 4 refers to the committment of the route. It is kinda confusing. See Freedom of the Hills, Appendix for greater details. Here's a quick cut and paste from:

http://www.alpinist.com/grades/

National Climbing Classification System (USA):
NCCS grades, often called “commitment grades,” indicate the time investment in a route for an “average” climbing team. I and II: Half a day or less for the technical (5th class) portion of the route.

III:Most of a day of roped climbing.
IV: A full day of technical climbing.
V: Typically requires an overnight on the route, or done fast and free in a day.
VI: Two or more days of hard climbing.
VII: Remote walls climbed in alpine style.


Everyone, thanks for your ideas and comments. Keep 'em coming!
johnGo


landgolier


Sep 24, 2005, 8:46 PM
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The setup pictured above on Grime n' Grout (5.10 IV) doesn't work if you have to thread quicklinks or bail tat or whatever, as the last guy has to yard up the whole rope to get the rope ready to be pulled. I like the original setup, with cloves instead of 8's and not clipped in to the shelf if you don't have to (OP may have done that for clarity). People need to stop worrying about killing noobs, there's no reason not to do this to speed up a big group, and besides, if you have 2 experienced people you send 1 fist to do fireman's belays.


styndall


Sep 24, 2005, 9:00 PM
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In reply to:
what kinda knot is that "power point"? it looks like a figure 8 or an overhand, but one of those bends has what appears to be 4 strands. the two legs of the anchor look doubled, but the loop looks like it's only two strands, not four.

It's just your basic 8-on-a-bight. If you'll notice, whenever you tie one of those, the number of loops in your clip-in point is half the number of strands that show up on your knot. A figure 8 like your tie-in appears to have two strands in the knot, while the one I've got on my curtainrod, with two loops, appears to have four strands. Tie a couple, and you'll see.

The OP is right in that my method requires (once everyone but the last dude has rapped) you to dismantle the knot, pull the rope up, thread, toss, and then rap. I don't think this is that much more trouble than the extra setup involved with the Johngo method, but, since he's said that he's removed the shock-loading issue with the power-point clip, I don't really have any other objections.


superbum


Sep 24, 2005, 10:09 PM
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Dude...you should send the OP (with a coupla quick changes that you've already acknowledged) into Rock and Ice as a "better beta" entry...they give away great prizes, harnesses, cams, etc!


jimdavis


Sep 25, 2005, 3:30 AM
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I can think of one faster too.

Take a cordellette, tie it into a Y shaped loop with uneven sides or "legs":

0 < to rappell device
|| < knot
| \
| \ < to beginner climber
|
|
(sorry i dont have a digital camera to do this and post pics.

Take the loop on the top and rig it up with your rappell device, put another biner in for friction if you think you might need it. The beginner goes into the shorter arm of that cordellete, and the more experienced climber goes in to the longer arm and rigs a backup friction hitch off their belay loop.

Pros: Faster than going seperatly, uses 1 device, you get to stay close to your beginner to coach them over the edge. You beat them to the anchor to get a sling ready for them. All the newer climber has to do is get over the edge and go along for the ride. Gets you into possition to give a firemans for everyone else.

Cons: For overhanging raps it kinda sucks dangling next to each other. Your weighting your anchor with 2 people, so it better be a bomber rap anchor. You need a spare cordellette or a "sh*t ton" of slings. But if your going down with that many people you'll probably have it anyway.


So, say I have 3 beginners and myself to get down...and it needs to be quick.

I'd rig this for myself and the least confident of the beginners, Pre-Rig the other 2 so they can rap as soon as I unweight the rope, once at the next anchor/ ground I can give a firemans backup to the other 2 climbers. Its always a really good idea to have a backup, especially with newer climbers, so this way (giving the firemans) newer climbers dont have to dick around with a friction hitch and get all clustered up with it.

The only disadvantage to this is your not up top to coach the other climbers over the edge.

This system works really well, used it today actually.

I'll probably be using this and the simo-rap (1 person on each strand) for most every rappell I do from a bomber station. It speeds things up nicely.

Cheers,
Jim


far_east_climber


Sep 25, 2005, 2:15 PM
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Haven't read much of replies here so I may be just about t repeat something. If I want to speed up a group rappel I sometimes use the 'alpine rappel escape' technique (or whatever it was called in the book). It's basically just about everybody clipping on all their rap devices to the rope before they head off, so when it's your turn to go, all you have to do is clip on your device to the belay loop or sling and whizz down.


iltripp


Sep 25, 2005, 4:05 PM
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For the most part I think the OP is a fairly good idea, except that I don't like the idea of newbies rapping on single strands. You seem to think that's ok, but I would only use your method for experienced climbers.

At a place like Stone mountain, where you're rapping down slab, I'm perfectly comfortable simul-rapping, and I usually do. A single strand rap as you describe would probably be fairly easy in this case.

One method I picked up on this site that I have used many times for new climbers (I've taught a few how to rappel) is this: (*this isn't for speed, but more for safety).

Climbers new to rappelling often aren't comfortable rigging the belay device without supervision. I like to be there and make sure they're doing it right. At the same, I don't like sending noobs down first. It's better to be there to give them a fireman's break, and I prefer to make sure I go down first to find the anchors and deal with any tangles that would cause long delays for a newer climber.

So, I supervise the noob setting up to rappel and make sure that everything is ok. Then, I take the tail end of the rope (i.e. their brake strand), tie a figure eight in a bight in both strands and clip into the anchor. Then, I rappel on this and get to the next set of anchors. All the noob has to do is unclip the 8-on-a-bight, untie it, and rappel. Down below, I can make sure they get a fireman's break, and at the same time I can start to thread the rope for the next rappel.

While slow rapping is certainly a hastle and not enjoyable, with new climbers, I would rather take the extra precaution and use my method than try to rush newbies


jimdavis


Sep 25, 2005, 4:14 PM
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In reply to:
While slow rapping is certainly a hastle and not enjoyable, with new climbers, I would rather take the extra precaution and use my method than try to rush newbies

Right on!

For that method though, why not just anchor them in with a sling, then not worry about the extra fig-8 on the anchor? I've seen that as an organizational trick for more than 2 climbers...but I don't see how it's easier for a newbie to get down rather than just unclipping their sling.

Thanks,
Jim


misanthropic_nihilist


Sep 25, 2005, 4:41 PM
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The way I teach rappelling to multiple students with 2 instructors is:

"Stack" the students on the double rappel line with extended rappels. Do this by extending everyone's rappel, and all clipping into the rope, so they are standing in a line. This way, every gets set up at once, and as soon as one student is off rappel, the next can be on rappel right away. One instructor is at the top, pretty much just giving emotional support to the students (since everyone is already rigged & checked out). The other instructor is on the ground giving a fireman's belay.

If you are the only experienced rappeller, you can get all the students 'stacked,' then tell them not to touch any carabiners/knots and that they will all be rappelling one by one. You will rappel first, then they will follow. Your weight on the rope below them acts as a fireman's belay. Doing a "rappel ground school" prior to this will help them understand exactly what to do.

Note that this setup is not 'institutional', in the fact that if something happens (student's hair stuck in ATC, etc), there is no easy way out. An 'institutional' setup require that rappel students either be on belay via top rope (in addition to their rap rope), or that their rappel line is lowerable (i.e. tied off with an easily accessible munter mule, with enough rope on the non-weighted side to lower someone at any rappel height to the ground.


iltripp


Sep 25, 2005, 5:05 PM
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In reply to:
While slow rapping is certainly a hastle and not enjoyable, with new climbers, I would rather take the extra precaution and use my method than try to rush newbies

Right on!

For that method though, why not just anchor them in with a sling, then not worry about the extra fig-8 on the anchor? I've seen that as an organizational trick for more than 2 climbers...but I don't see how it's easier for a newbie to get down rather than just unclipping their sling.

Thanks,
Jim

Perhaps I explained poorly. The fig-8 is not to anchor them in, but to create a point for me to rappel from. Since they are already set up to rappel, if I don't tie the 8-on-a-bight, I would be hanging directly off their ATC. I've never actually tried this, but it seems like it would be awkward and uncomfortable. Are we talking about the same thing?


airborne_r6


Sep 25, 2005, 6:51 PM
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Re: Tip - Speeding up a group rappel [In reply to]
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I would be hanging directly off their ATC. I've never actually tried this, but it seems like it would be awkward and uncomfortable. Are we talking about the same thing?

We tried this once, don't ask why because I don't remember, but it wasn't that bad you just had to get the person in a spot where they could stand comfortably that allowed the rope to be tight on the anchors. That way the rappeler was hanging of the anchors and not off the ATC. I wouldn't recommend it though because every time the lower person moved it jerked the upper person around.

Doesn't the way you are recommending require a rope four times longer than the height of the rappel? Otherwise I think that is a great idea.


jimdavis


Sep 25, 2005, 7:10 PM
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In reply to:
In reply to:
In reply to:
While slow rapping is certainly a hastle and not enjoyable, with new climbers, I would rather take the extra precaution and use my method than try to rush newbies

Right on!

For that method though, why not just anchor them in with a sling, then not worry about the extra fig-8 on the anchor? I've seen that as an organizational trick for more than 2 climbers...but I don't see how it's easier for a newbie to get down rather than just unclipping their sling.

Thanks,
Jim

Perhaps I explained poorly. The fig-8 is not to anchor them in, but to create a point for me to rappel from. Since they are already set up to rappel, if I don't tie the 8-on-a-bight, I would be hanging directly off their ATC. I've never actually tried this, but it seems like it would be awkward and uncomfortable. Are we talking about the same thing?

Yep, we are. If you have them extend their rappell with a sling or something, it won't pull on them at all.

I guess it just really depends on the situation: how many people, size of the ledge, location of the anchor. I guess your trick could work best on those smaller ledges.

Cheers,
Jim


iltripp


Sep 25, 2005, 7:21 PM
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In reply to:
I would be hanging directly off their ATC. I've never actually tried this, but it seems like it would be awkward and uncomfortable. Are we talking about the same thing?

We tried this once, don't ask why because I don't remember, but it wasn't that bad you just had to get the person in a spot where they could stand comfortably that allowed the rope to be tight on the anchors. That way the rappeler was hanging of the anchors and not off the ATC. I wouldn't recommend it though because every time the lower person moved it jerked the upper person around.

Doesn't the way you are recommending require a rope four times longer than the height of the rappel? Otherwise I think that is a great idea.

No... I think you are misunderstanding the situation.

1) You rig the rope just like normal
2) set up your noob to rappel in the normal manner
3) take the rope below his device, tie a bight, clip it into the anchors
4) set yourself up to rappel below the bight (i.e. the bight basically places your weight on the anchor instead of the noob)
5) rappel down to the next anchors
6) unclip, shout off rappel, and give a firemans break to the noob
7) while he's rapping, get one end of the rope threaded through the rings, so its ready to pull the second he is done rapping.


iltripp


Sep 25, 2005, 7:26 PM
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Re: Tip - Speeding up a group rappel [In reply to]
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In reply to:
In reply to:
In reply to:
In reply to:
While slow rapping is certainly a hastle and not enjoyable, with new climbers, I would rather take the extra precaution and use my method than try to rush newbies

Right on!

For that method though, why not just anchor them in with a sling, then not worry about the extra fig-8 on the anchor? I've seen that as an organizational trick for more than 2 climbers...but I don't see how it's easier for a newbie to get down rather than just unclipping their sling.

Thanks,
Jim

Perhaps I explained poorly. The fig-8 is not to anchor them in, but to create a point for me to rappel from. Since they are already set up to rappel, if I don't tie the 8-on-a-bight, I would be hanging directly off their ATC. I've never actually tried this, but it seems like it would be awkward and uncomfortable. Are we talking about the same thing?

Yep, we are. If you have them extend their rappell with a sling or something, it won't pull on them at all.

I guess it just really depends on the situation: how many people, size of the ledge, location of the anchor. I guess your trick could work best on those smaller ledges.

Cheers,
Jim

Ah... now I see what you mean about the sling. I've never extended a rappel with a sling, but I'll try that next time. I also like that cordellette trick you mentioned before. Is it awkward trying to rappel with two people hanging off the rope?


jimdavis


Sep 25, 2005, 8:40 PM
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It's a little weird geting over the edge, then when you get down and have to still rappell even thought YOU aren't weighting the rope. It's best in vertical or less than vertical raps.

Cheers,
Jim


airborne_r6


Sep 26, 2005, 1:11 AM
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Re: Tip - Speeding up a group rappel [In reply to]
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No... I think you are misunderstanding the situation.

3) take the rope below his device, tie a bight, clip it into the anchors
4) set yourself up to rappel below the bight (i.e. the bight basically places your weight on the anchor instead of the noob)

I was. For some reason I was thinking pull the brake end back up and tie the figure-8 at the ends of the rope. I don't know what I was thinking before, it makes a lot of sense now and I have needed it in the past. Thanks for the great idea.


Partner philbox
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Sep 26, 2005, 1:50 AM
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Re: Tip - Speeding up a group rappel [In reply to]
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In reply to:
http://outdoordads.org/...limbing/grouprap.jpg

Le'ts hope this generates some good disucssion. If anyone sees something lethally wrong with this rig, please do us all a favor by pointing it out. If you find it useful, give that a mention as well.

Wind at your back,
johnGo

Back to the OP picture. I think a better setup would be to clip the two figure eight knots (clove hitches) directly into the power point. As it is set up redundancy is compromised and there would definitely be extension if one arm failed in the anchor. Clipping the abseil line in as shown in the above pic also places stress on the knot i/e the knot will be being dragged apart in a way that the knot was not designed to be loaded in. The knot used is not an omnidirectional knot. Clipping in to the powerpoint is far superior if this setup were to be used.

All the same with a little tidying up this setup could work quite well.


alpnclmbr1


Sep 26, 2005, 2:29 AM
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A great example of how a little knowledge can be a dangerous thing.

My advice to any beginner would be to avoid climbing with anyone who thinks like the people in this thread.


curt


Sep 26, 2005, 2:32 AM
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A great example of how a little knowledge can be a dangerous thing.

My advice to any beginner would be to avoid climbing with anyone who thinks like the people in this thread.

Do you mean me too? I posted in this thread--but I think I only to flame it. :lol:

Curt


iltripp


Sep 26, 2005, 2:33 AM
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A great example of how a little knowledge can be a dangerous thing.

My advice to any beginner would be to avoid climbing with anyone who thinks like the people in this thread.

Gee... that was helpful. Jacka$$

There were quite a few decent ideas on this thread, and it's been a pretty good discussion. Unless you have worthwhile input, why don't you go play somewhere else.


jimdavis


Sep 26, 2005, 2:42 AM
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A great example of how a little knowledge can be a dangerous thing.

My advice to any beginner would be to avoid climbing with anyone who thinks like the people in this thread.

And my advice to any beginner would be to ignore your frequently useless, unsubstantiated posts.

Jim


Partner philbox
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Sep 26, 2005, 2:49 AM
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A great example of how a little knowledge can be a dangerous thing.

My advice to any beginner would be to avoid climbing with anyone who thinks like the people in this thread.

In reply to:
alpnclmbr1 sig, On a mission to combat misinformation on this site.

20 years climbing experience, all forms

Your mission is failing in its execution. Very happy for you to be on this mission of course. You will need to bring to the thread a little more of an explanation so that the beginners know exactly why you would make that statement. Just telling someone not to is not a good enough reason for them not to if you get my drift.

Please add something positive otherwise your message is pretty much lost on your audience.


saltamonte


Sep 26, 2005, 2:54 AM
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. near here is a great canyoneering run called matacanes http://www.rockclimbing.com/...Area.php?AreaID=8379 , 5 hours in a hurry three big rappels. and 2 dozen waterfalls to jump from 2 meters to 12 including one in the dark of one of two places the river goes underground. last time i was there i noticed another group using basically that set up I appologize for not remembering which knot they used but the set up was basically the same to fix each side for independent rappels. it worked very well. I will likely use it next time we go. we ussually have a group of 5-10 that is a major time and boredom saver.


lewisiarediviva


Sep 26, 2005, 3:57 AM
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Hello? Do the op's rap idea. Looks like it would work great to me. As long as the last person to rap redoes the whole sh'bang so that after he raps he can pull the rope through.


jimdavis


Sep 26, 2005, 3:59 AM
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In reply to:
Ah... now I see what you mean about the sling. I've never extended a rappel with a sling, but I'll try that next time. I also like that cordellette trick you mentioned before. Is it awkward trying to rappel with two people hanging off the rope?

Another trick you might like, that I use.

Take a 4' runner (hopefully dyneema cause they rock) and girth hitch it to your belay loop. Tie a knot about half way up and clip your rappell device around it, so your biner is going through both sides. Use the left over material and put a locker in it for your personal anchor attachment. When you leave the station, clip it back to your belay loop, and you'll have an extended rappell (makes it easier to use a FH backup right off your belay loop), easy anchoring sling, and redundancy all in the same sling (minimal belay loop clutter).

I will admit I got a good deal of that info from the back of a Petzl catalog, except for clipping around the knot for redundancy.

Cheers,
Jim


iltripp


Sep 26, 2005, 4:25 AM
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^^^^

Nice... I'll try that next time I'm out climbing.

Thanks Jim


trevzilla


Sep 26, 2005, 4:43 AM
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Just thought I'd put in my $0.02. I like it. I often go with big groups. And I think the setup is pretty fool proof. I'll be using it in the future. Although, I'll probably use a clove hitch as instead of the eights.


alpnclmbr1


Sep 26, 2005, 5:27 AM
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In reply to:
In reply to:
A great example of how a little knowledge can be a dangerous thing.

My advice to any beginner would be to avoid climbing with anyone who thinks like the people in this thread.

In reply to:
alpnclmbr1 sig, On a mission to combat misinformation on this site.

20 years climbing experience, all forms

Your mission is failing in its execution. Very happy for you to be on this mission of course. You will need to bring to the thread a little more of an explanation so that the beginners know exactly why you would make that statement. Just telling someone not to is not a good enough reason for them not to if you get my drift.

Please add something positive otherwise your message is pretty much lost on your audience.

I will add something useful.

The fact that you as a guide do not have a problem with the many ridiculous climbing related comments...... And you are a guide no less. Shame on you!

Jessus
A guide suggests that simultaneous single line raps is the answer for beginning rappelers....

Oh, and that rigging raps off of a cordelette instead of using the fixed system speeds things up????


I have never met a climber that would not immediately see the truth of those two propositions. I guess this is some kind of special place. (as far as the posters anyway)



ps. I still think my original comment was more to the point.


jimdavis


Sep 26, 2005, 6:02 AM
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Oh, and that rigging raps off of a cordelette instead of using the fixed system speeds things up????

Hmm, well:

1: considering that you have to go from a belay anchor to a rappell at some point, an anchor like that is probably there for the first rap.

2: You could rig that setup with a sling to, easilly. And quickly at that.

3: It doesn't take that long to create an anchor like that even with a cordellette. And considering how much that could speed things up, under the right circumstances...I dont think it's that unreasonable to do.


But why would you have an anchor like that there anyway? It's not like you just belayed someone up, or had to anchor a large group of people into 2 bolts/ rings..... :roll:


iltripp


Sep 26, 2005, 5:39 PM
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I will add something useful.

Not really... The two criticisms you made below have already been covered, multiple times. Moreover, those were by no means the only suggestions made in this thread.

In reply to:
The fact that you as a guide do not have a problem with the many ridiculous climbing related comments...... And you are a guide no less. Shame on you!

The fact that you claim to know better, but choose to insult everyone involved rather than enlighten them shows that you are less concerned with "combatting misinformation" than you are with inflating your ego. Shame on you!

In reply to:
Jessus
A guide suggests that simultaneous single line raps is the answer for beginning rappelers....

As I said, multiple people have pointed out the shortcomings of simultaneous single line raps for beginners. Those comments, made by myself and others, were attempts at constructive criticism of the OP. They were helpful. Your drivel, on the other hand, was a waste of the time it took you to type it. Rather than help anyone with decent constructive criticism, you insulted everyone, including those of us who were trying to make helpful suggestions to the OP's systems.

In reply to:
Oh, and that rigging raps off of a cordelette instead of using the fixed system speeds things up????

Again, you could have posted this as constructive criticism. Moreover, while building an anchor with a cordelette to rappel may not be the most efficient way to do things, it certainly isn't dangerous. In a situation with numerous people simul-rapping (just not noobs), I could see the value in this set-up. I doubt that I would use it, but I don't think it's worthy of such a condescending response.

In reply to:
I have never met a climber that would not immediately see the truth of those two propositions. I guess this is some kind of special place. (as far as the posters anyway)

Some kind of "special place"? Now you're just babbling. Does having your head stuck up your a$$ make it difficult to articulate?


In reply to:
ps. I still think my original comment was more to the point.

And I stand by my original response: Jacka$$


Partner philbox
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Sep 26, 2005, 10:21 PM
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I will add something useful.

The fact that you as a guide do not have a problem with the many ridiculous climbing related comments...... And you are a guide no less. Shame on you!

Point is that I am not locked into only one mindset and way of doing things, don`t take that as me suggesting that you are. I can see worth in any system and I take systems and use them for my own ends. I am always open to a better way of doing things, that said when it comes to safety I am paranoid. I can see worth in the setup and so I say so. Yep, it may not be for beginners but for a set of experienced climbers it may have worth. Just not exactly as it is depicted.

In reply to:
Jessus
A guide suggests that simultaneous single line raps is the answer for beginning rappelers....

Agreed. A beginner rapeller should definitely be on both an abseil rope and a top belay, the abseil rope should most definitely be a releasable system. Mind you rapelling aint rocket science and thus after serving ones apprenticeship learning how to abseil one can then graduate in a very short time to being fairly independant.

In reply to:
Oh, and that rigging raps off of a cordelette instead of using the fixed system speeds things up????

Also agreed, thus my suggestion to clip directly into the powerpoint which would negate the need for a cord/webolette. Powerpoint in this case being the fixed mallion or other such fixed gear on the end of the chains.

In reply to:
I have never met a climber that would not immediately see the truth of those two propositions. I guess this is some kind of special place. (as far as the posters anyway)



ps. I still think my original comment was more to the point.

You might but most don`t and thus your message is lost on your audience. Thanks for taking the trouble to clarify your point. I hate to use cliches but you catch more bees with honey than you do with vinegar.


david.yount
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Oct 21, 2005, 5:08 PM
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This is ingenious and safe; use it and enjoy. I like the detail of threading the line through the rap rings (or similar) such that the last person does not need to feed the rope, it’s already rigged; just unclip and untie the two sides.

I’d prefer to replace the Figure-8 knots with the Alpine Butterfly.
http://www.animatedknots.com/...pinebutterflyR10.gif
The Alpine Butterfly does not jam, typically it’s significantly easier to untie. Also easier to untie than clove hitches, in this rigging. How to tie.

I’d also prefer to clip the two knots to the powerpoint, rather than each to its single leg of the anchor matrix.

I've been considering a rigging just like this for some time. Cayoneering in Utah, with the longer drops, in moderate to large groups, the rappels can really absorb time. In my experience simul-rappelling does not work well at all for canyoneering rappels. I like slot canyons, the rappels are tight, not providing for comfort for either person on a simul rappel. This may seen easy to overcome, with appropriate positioning and communication, and getting to know each other's style in rappelling, but trust me, until you've tried simul-rappelling in a slot canyon, it's significantly different than virtually all climbing environments involving rappelling (unless you've tried simul-rappelling in a squeeze chimney).

david yount.


toml


Oct 27, 2005, 11:42 AM
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Johngo,

There is a video out there called 'guide tricks for climbers'. You may want to check it out.

To reduce downtime further, multiple people can be "on deck" at the same time, e.g. clipping their rappel devices in.

I'd make the spacing between the two knots wider so the last person can be setting up their rappel inside there.


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