Gear Articles tagged ‘trad climbing’

Nice Rack II: Put Together Your Climbing Rack

By: Andy Chapman | August 2nd, 2011
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Part 2: Putting it all together

The Desert is a cam intensive place to climb

The Desert is a cam intensive place to climb

Building a rack is an investment that is best viewed on a lifelong time frame. You’ll have to throw down on the front end, but aside from occasionally cleaning, re-lubing and re-slinging, cams will last many years. If you climb in The Desert or other cam intensive nitch crags like Vedauwoo, then your rack is never really complete.  Don’t despair.  If you frequent these venues, you will probably make friends with other like-minded individuals and have an open door policy of gear borrowing and lending. Read More …

Nice Rack: A Practical Guide to Cams

By: Andy Chapman | August 1st, 2011
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Josh taking his pick of the litter

Josh taking his pick of the litter

Knee-deep in the gear room last June, I was confronted with a major dilemma: what rack to take for the summer? Heading mainly to Squamish and the Bugaboos in the Northwest, I realized that taking the entire arsenal would be overkill. A phone call to my friend Nate in Portland, Ore., quickly sorted things out. “Dude, it’s granite. You probably only need doubles, maybe triples in a few sizes.” And with that, more than half my rack stayed at home. Lest you get the wrong impression of me as a gear-hoarding, over-protecting, grubby consumer, be forewarned that the parallel world of desert cracks leads to a skewed outlook when it comes to the cam department.

Spring-loaded camming devices (SLCDs or simply cams) can become a hotly contested issue among gearheads and dirtbags alike. Safety is a concern, to be sure, but other subtleties such as ease of use, holding power, size range, and cost come into play. Racking preference is largely personal, and as such is laden with bias. People new to trad climbing are often forced to rely on beta from their more “experienced” partners or simply go for the price point. This article will hopefully shed some light on the matter by briefly highlighting major design differences and providing some recommendations for putting together the right rack for you. Read More …

Is Fixed Gear Safe?

By: Adam Riser | November 1st, 2010
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Drilled angle. A common site on desert towers. This one is about as bomber as they get.

Utah’s desert climbing season is in full swing right now, and a couple of recent trips have me thinking once again about whether or not to trust old fixed gear. Every trad climbing location on earth has its share of mank gear, but the desert seems to be sketchier than most. It’s pretty common to clip a decades-old star drive in soft sandstone and then run it out 20 feet on hard climbing above.

No laxative in the world loosens your bowels faster than fixed desert gear. The question is, are you scared shitless for a good reason, or are you just overreacting? You’ll climb a lot more smoothly if you know that a fall won’t lead to a “ping!” sound and an even bigger fall. Then again, it’s good to know if whipping off is off limits.

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When To Retire Climbing Gear – Part 2: ‘Biners, Cams and More

By: Adam Riser | October 18th, 2010
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Andy Anderson trusting his gear while taking a big ride on Isotoner Moaner (5.12 a/b)

Aluminum does not have a lifespan, so aluminum gear can, in theory, last forever. The reality is that gear takes a beating and will need to be replaced from time to time. How often it needs to be replaced depends on how you use your gear. A fixed quickdraw may find the rope-end carabiner worn to the point of being dangerous within a single summer, but the carabiner that you use to rack your stoppers will probably last forever.

In case you missed it, check out Part I:

When To Retire Climbing Gear Part 1: Ropes, Harnesses, Slings, Helmets

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When To Retire Climbing Gear Part 1: Ropes, Harnesses, Slings, Helmets

By: Adam Riser | October 15th, 2010
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Dude, they were totally going to throw this out. Free gear, bra!

Skiers often buy a whole new kit every season. Mountain bikers get new frames with surprising regularity. Rock climbers, on the other hand, often use the same cams, carabiners, harnesses, and even ropes year after year after year. This is pretty ironic, considering the fact that of all these groups, the climber are the ones whose lives literally depend on their gear. Nearly every climber out there has at least one piece of gear that would fail an inspection by an industrial rope access technician (the closest thing to climbing that actually has guidelines on retiring gear).

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Relationship Guide to Climbing: You and Your Partner

By: Andy Chapman | September 14th, 2010
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You and Your Partner

You and Your Partner

Having someone to climb with does not mean you are out of the woods. Relationship drama is far from over once you leave the dating scene and move to more committed relationships. The problems become much more subtle beyond your first climb.

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Daisy Chains: Anchor Link or the Weakest Link?

By: Adam Riser | August 16th, 2010
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Backcountry.com employee Ben Sukow using a properly clipped daisy chain at an exposed belay on Hell Raiser (III 5.11)

Daisy chain safety isn’t exactly a new issue, but I still see people do it wrong often enough that I feel it’s worth the digital print space to revisit the concern. A lot of people use daisy chains on their harness for clipping into belays on the way up a multi-pitch route or at rappel anchors on the way down. There’s nothing wrong with it. You do it, I do it, Tommy Caldwell does it. The key is to do it right so you’re connected in a manner that maintains the sling’s strength.

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How to Make Good Tape Gloves for Climbing

By: Adam Riser | July 23rd, 2010
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Backcountry.com copywriter Andy Anderson stoked to have a good tape job on the 155-foot-long Lite Not Solid (5.10d)

The difference between a good tape glove for crack climbing and a bad one can be fairly minor … or it can cost you a send. Good tape gloves save your hands and let you get away with a bit of thrutching when things get desperate. Bad tape gloves can be worse than wearing nothing at all. I’ve had tape gloves ball up and keep me from putting my hands in a crack, I’ve had them come off on the fifth pitch of an 18-pitch route, and I’ve even seen a friend who went with the old-school full-wrap method accidentally clip his tape glove (with his hand in it) to a piece of gear. Needless to say, that one took some doing to get out of.

A good tape glove should be thin enough that it doesn’t really change your hand size, it should be durable enough to last 20+ pitches, and it should leave your palm completely clear of any tape. There are several “perfect” tape gloves out there, but this one is my favorite.

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