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murph24
Apr 15, 2007, 3:50 AM
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Registered: Feb 2, 2007
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I want to buy some biners for my slackline so that are seperate from my climbing gear... any recommendations? will be using a 3 biner set up....
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biffjr
Apr 15, 2007, 3:58 AM
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i use a couple different biners the petzl william screw gate and the omega pacific ovals.... now the petzls are roughy 16 dollars and the omegas are about 5 dollars ... so take your pick AND just to say it as a side note agian THEY MUST BE DEDICATED!!!
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endercore
Apr 15, 2007, 4:57 AM
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i'd say the cheapest ones you can find. or a compilation of retired gear...
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sdbum
Apr 15, 2007, 7:35 AM
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Registered: Aug 5, 2006
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go with ovals
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skidawg
Apr 15, 2007, 9:21 AM
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Registered: Jan 6, 2005
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I've just been using biners from my climbing gear for slacklining (just getting into it myself)...why should they be dedicated slackline biners?...
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greenketch
Apr 15, 2007, 7:13 PM
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Registered: Jan 12, 2005
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Definatley go with retired climbing gear. Or decide to retire and than make it dedicated gear. The loads placed on gear when slacklining are huge compared to general climbing use. It is entirely possible to damage the gear by slackin on it. Not enough to make it bad but for sure to make it's climbing use questionable. Ie. a couple of the biners I moved over for use have developed sticky gates after I use em on a jumptight line a few times.
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basilisk
Apr 19, 2007, 4:06 AM
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greenketch wrote: Definatley go with retired climbing gear. [...] The loads placed on gear when slacklining are huge compared to general climbing use. i don't understand statements like this. you don't trust a biner for climbing......so you assign it to a sport where it has to take even more stress? i have no data to back this up, but it'd be nice if someone could confirm it for me: due to the fact that slacking forces are much higher, and also static, i feel like a steel biner would be optimal. steel would be much better able to cope with high energy static forces; far more so than an aluminum biner, which is only designed to handle short high-energy falls
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sara_faye
Apr 19, 2007, 5:52 AM
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Registered: Feb 27, 2006
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For this slackline setup: is it just a hip height line in a park or are you talking about a highline? When I set up a slackline I dont use a biner... a bunch of webbing, a couple of quick release knots... you can make it as easy or as complicated as you want, but I find the less stuff you use, the easier it is to keep it tight and the less stuff there is to break.
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gobennyjo
Apr 19, 2007, 1:13 PM
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Registered: Jan 8, 2007
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basilisk wrote: greenketch wrote: Definatley go with retired climbing gear. [...] The loads placed on gear when slacklining are huge compared to general climbing use. i don't understand statements like this. you don't trust a biner for climbing......so you assign it to a sport where it has to take even more stress? i have no data to back this up, but it'd be nice if someone could confirm it for me: due to the fact that slacking forces are much higher, and also static, i feel like a steel biner would be optimal. steel would be much better able to cope with high energy static forces; far more so than an aluminum biner, which is only designed to handle short high-energy falls Yea but in rock climbing if a biner fails it can me death, but if a biner fails five feet of the ground your ok.
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slacker_jon
Apr 19, 2007, 3:16 PM
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Registered: Aug 29, 2006
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I have a 25kn steel oval screw-gate that got broken last year slacklining.... Keep your climbing stuff seperate!
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coldclimb
Apr 23, 2007, 1:21 AM
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Registered: Jan 14, 2002
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gobennyjo wrote: basilisk wrote: greenketch wrote: Definatley go with retired climbing gear. [...] The loads placed on gear when slacklining are huge compared to general climbing use. i don't understand statements like this. you don't trust a biner for climbing......so you assign it to a sport where it has to take even more stress? i have no data to back this up, but it'd be nice if someone could confirm it for me: due to the fact that slacking forces are much higher, and also static, i feel like a steel biner would be optimal. steel would be much better able to cope with high energy static forces; far more so than an aluminum biner, which is only designed to handle short high-energy falls Yea but in rock climbing if a biner fails it can me death, but if a biner fails five feet of the ground your ok. Just to nitpick, the forces aren't static on a slackline. And yeah, a biner failing in a slackline might leave you with a bruise if you're unlucky, but it comes with a really cool story about how you broke a biner.
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