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fishaofmen
Jan 28, 2006, 4:32 AM
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Registered: Jun 6, 2005
Posts: 1
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The Main Question I will eventually buy an SBI pulley system. For now, however, I'm looking to buy some cheap pulleys. I want them to work well, though. Initially, I was looking to buy some Petzl Ultra Light Pulleys (http://store.bentgate.com/nylpulwheelb.html), but at a working strength of .8Kn (~180lbs.) I'm scared they will fail to work in a slackline tightening system. I want to set up a 100' line. What's the minimum working strength I should look for in a pulley? Background Info My roommate and I just spent a good bit of the afternoon working on setting up a pretty long line. Usually, it doesn't take so long because I just keep adding people to pull on the line. This time it was just my roommate and I. We got it up, but not as tight as I'd like it, especially after soft-pointing. I think I've realized a couple things when it comes to getting long lines tight: 1. Static rope will work better than webbing in a tightening system. 2. Pulleys help.
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slacklinejoe
Jan 28, 2006, 6:34 AM
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Registered: Nov 5, 2003
Posts: 1423
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Those plastic sheaves turn to fragments under tension. I couldn't even get a medium sized line tight with them before they blew. Sorry, I don't have an exact #, but if you are soft pointing it would be whatever your pre-tensioning your line to + a safety margin, 1,000 lb might do it, but frankly your money would probably be best spent getting something that is rated for the full working load of the slackline.
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coldclimb
Jan 28, 2006, 6:34 PM
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Registered: Jan 14, 2002
Posts: 6909
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Yeah that plastic won't hold up. I'm with Joe, you're better off buying something that's made to take the force. :)
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