Please remember that this will just work in an emergency smooth rappel. A high shock will very probably break the rope, and you can die. If you wanna load light and still wanna rappel, instead of using the typical 9-11mm rope, you can use a lighter 7.8mm one approved for climbing and rappelling.
@@Waldhandwerk thank you for your appreciation! If you didn't already, perhaps people would also love a video covering other emergency rappel techniques, such as making a Swiss Seat to rappel with it plus a carabiner, and how we can secure ourselves to the rope for such a descent with a Paracord Marchard or Prussik knot. And did you check the South African Abseil technique? They improved the classical no-harness double rope rappel. Best to you, too! =) PS: There are 2 carabiner variations for emergency rappelling too, to add friction to the descent.
I have a decent background in technical rope rescue. I never begrudge those who are innovative and creative when it comes to anything, and the same goes for on-rope activities. However...this is a really, really bad idea, in my humble opinion. Without going into detail and putting everyone to sleep, there is NO safe working load (SWL) for paracord when it comes to attaching a human being to that line. Even in an "emergency", things can go from bad to life threatening in a second should that line break. Doubling the cord does nothing for the strength, unless you're using two lines, rigged independent of each other. And attaching it to a tree with abrasive bark and no protection is just asking for a catastrophic failure. When you add in the fact that knots reduce the minimum breaking strength (MBS) of any cordage/rope by 30% to nearly 50%, you're talking SCARY weight limits. Add in heat from friction, abrasion and shock loading and you better hope you've made peace with your Higher Power of choice. On top of it all, using a carabiner as a rappel device--even with rope designed for this sort of use--is a dicey endeavor. Unless I'm in a burning building or similar situation, there's no way you could get me on that rig. Try something like a Black Diamond Alpine Bod Harness, Mammut 6mm Rappel Cord and any variety of rappel devices designed for skinny ropes and you have a solid and safe system that can be stowed in your pack with a minimum of space of weight. Train and practice with your kit in a controlled environment. Do your homework. It's your life, after all.
+hwypilot1 This comment needs to be on to top! As an arborist, recreational climber and trained in basic RAT, I totally agree with hwypilot. Unless you are facing certain death, do not attemt this, for the reasons stated above. At least experiment with it from a safe height - with a backup - and a friend - near a hospital ;-)
interesting and informative comment thanks. what would be an ideal emergency line to carry for emergency rappelling (eg. stuck on ski resort elevator, flaming building ..). What would be the best safe/transportable in your opinion ? are there other options such as metal cables ?thanks
Video: Rappel with 550 paracord ... th-cam.com/video/9AY8YiIdD8A/w-d-xo.html ... spoiler alert, he lives (don't be too quick to draw conclusions about the rope :-)).
mountaineering is not a set standard. whatever works works man. he evan said at the beginning; dont try this at home. I have confidence in this system for emergency situations. you have what you have.
Ok, because I had read that aluminum got almost too hot to touch on paracord rappelling but the guy doing it had it coiled (one strand) around the carabiner about 6x; he didn't have your setup, and he only came down about 15ft. So let's say you're trying to rappel off of the 4th floor of a burning building--no other way out--your method would be the best?
Wutzthedeal ;) ...if i would have to flee from a fire and just 18th of paracord with one carabiner or metall ring, ...yes. At least now i would feel "save" to abseil my little childrens in such a situation. ...hope im never in ;) Take care.
Did you say this was with German paracord ? Is it any thicker or tougher than the American stuff ? I wouldn't want to do this with the line unprotected on the tree, as you could very easily abrade through it. Very cool though !
I agree with this guy from the blade forums: "I rappell quite a bit and you can go all the way down to a 5mm cord as long as the working load (15% of tensile strength) is more than your weight and equipment combined (specifically spectra type cords). However, consider the friction and abrasion of the cord going over the cliff or ledge, a tiny scrape may cause the cord to fail critically. Anything under a 8mm cord will require a Personal Escape descender which is smaller than a regular descender and specifically designed for thinner ropes. However, anything under an 8mm personal escape rope is taking your life in your hands... rappelling with this equipment should be done only if certain death is guaranteed if you do not escape. Paracord should never be used for rappelling because tensile strength is 550lbs which means the working strength is only 82 lbs. Also, Paracord is not a static line. Dynamic rope is very very bad for rappelling as it will stretch and bounce and may snap after a few bounds. Also consider if rappelling out of a burning building, that ropes are highly inflammable and will melt under relative low heat."
interesting and informative comment thanks. what would be an ideal emergency line to carry for emergency rappelling (eg. stuck on ski resort elevator, flaming building ..). What would be the best safe/transportable in your opinion ? are there other options such as metal cables ?thanks
Hi thanks for watching. I think on the one hand it was too short and on the other hand it would have been difficult to get the rope back from below. Iv you want it back ;) Take care, Sepp
Hab nochmal nachgedacht und ich meine, man könnte aus einem der Seilenden auch noch solch einen Sicherungsprusik konstruieren. Bei der Dicke eines Seiles zwar nicht so toll, aber bei dünneren Reepschnüren sollte da etwas machbar sein. Vielleicht probier ich mal was aus ... VG, Tim
I heard about a guy who got seriously injured rappelling with paracord. He only lived because the paramedics were very close when it happened. For one-time emergency use, I am going to buy some climbing accessory cord to have with me. It has a tensile strength of thousands of pounds, even though it is rather thin.
Hi Sam, yes, the shop had no paracord at this time and told me the german paracord has the same stats. 220 kg strongness and so on. I think it has also just 4 or 5 mm thinkess. Happy Weekend, Sepp
Sepp, meinst Du mit solchen kurzen Klettereinlagen den fast Absturz ;-) aus Deinem Video "Bushcraft with Adventure stuff", wo Dich Dein Freund David mit selbstgebauten Eispickeln begleitet? Da dachte ich auch,gewagt, gewagt. Oh :) Deine Einladung nehme ich sehr gerne an. LG Benny
Hallo Stephan mein guter Freund ; ) Danke für Deinen Kommentar. ...wenn Sandra das Video mal anschaut ist es vielleicht besser ich geh derweil mit den Kindern spazieren ; )) Alles Gute, Sepp
Risky, risky. There is a right way to do climbing experiments. Best to do your experimenting with a seperate belay from a friend and wear a helmet. You could survive the fall, but not if you hit your head and not if do not have a friend to provide aid and get help.
Yeah i have a very simular setup to his in a little kit i keep in my pack but its mostly for gear or for rappelling situations where the ground is still supporting a large portion of my wieght
Can you repel using 550 paracord? Well, you can. But you would be a fool to do so. I speak as a previous owner of a rock climbing gym. We are very well drilled in safety with rope work.
Hallo Daniel, danke für´s zuschauen und kommentieren. ...eingeschnitten zum Glück gar nicht, es war relativ einfach sich mit einer Hand zu sichern. ...aber klar, das gezeigte ist die allerletzte Lösung ...viel kann man da nicht mehr weglassen, haha. Kameras und Mikro usw. ist sicher immer eine Schwachstelle bei mir. Mal sehen ; ) irgendwann bin ich ja sogar HD geworden ; )) LG Sepp
Thank you Géza, glad you liked it. More hiking the climbing, "our" Mountains in Salzburg and Tyrol, ...between 2300 and 2800 metres. Have a good week, Sepp
Hi, thanks for watching, ...yes in this video watch?v=OuXSOXrx4NQ for a few meters. We had it double, around a tree, to get the rope back after repelling. All the best, Sepp
Freut mich wenn´s Dir gefallen hat Stefan ; ) ...zugegeben bushcrafte ich lieber, aber seit ich hier etwas öffentlich geworden bin ist das nicht mehr so leicht ; )) LG Sepp
You need redundancy in your anchoring line!! I can't believe you went over with a SINGLE LINE holding you to the tree! People die here in Colorado literally every year for reasons just like that.
Soniti1324 Extremely dangerous and risky. But the poster DOES state that this technique is to be used as a last resort and in extreme emergencies. If the Boogie men are about to get you and this is your only escape option.... then you would probably do it.
sir technique is right to use double paracord but paracord stress point is around circle where paracord act as single . you should encirle the tree with both cords running same side and the making the notch. its your luck you won't slip iand fall n the way and able to posted the video otherwise in slip/fall situation force on cord will be weight multiplies speed of falling and that will be more than 250kg which 550 rated at.
@@sukhbirsingh9798 I agree the line was not doubled all the way. I would probably double up the cord all the way and start to handle it as a single rope. Loop around the tree like 3 times before tying off, to minimize possibility of moving under load. Also, recovering your cord after emergency rappel may not be a critical aspect compared to the marginal safety anyway, so I would probably make a static fix a the anchor. Last resort solution, sure.
Hello, thanks for watching and commenting. ...no special reason, maybe because this is the easiest and fastest seat I know, just one loop not much rope work. Happy 2013, Sepp
Hallo Sepp, ich muss sagen das ich deine Videos sehr schätze und bin froh das du hier allen mitgeteilt hast dieses nicht Zuhause zu probieren. DAS WAR SEHR RISKANT-ich bin früher viel geklettert und habe schon so manches Glück gehabt mit Seilen aber ich würde WIRKLICH nur im Notfall Paracord mein Leben anvertrauen. Wie gesagt sehr Riskant
Hallo Sepp! Schönes Video und tolle Ecke, aber bei Paracord weiß man kaum, was man da für Qualität kriegt, während Reepschnur (5mm oder mehr) garantiert und zertifiziert so um die 5,5kN hält und für derlei Einsätze gemacht ist. Paracord (sofern es überhaupt das echte und gute ist), ist dafür gemacht frei in der Luft zu baumeln, also ohne jede Reibung, Auflage, Knotenbremse usw. (Natürlich solte man auch bei Reepschnur/Kletterseil zu mehr als 5mm greifen, aber wir reden ja vom Notfallset hier.)
Great video! I would love to try this with 550 but think I'll add a safety line and friend belay of larger climing rope. I don't trust that the 550 cord I've bought on amazon is really 550# rated!
Hallo Richard, vielen Dank mein Freund, ...ja das würde mir auch gut gefallen, sie wurden anscheinend immer wieder mal zu Wohnzwecken benützt, ...ganz lange her ; )) Alles Gute, Sepp
I am glad we got to see this video :)) Don't worry my friend: I don't think I'll do this anytime soon just for fun! But it is a good thing to know! Thanks for sharing! All teh best, Denis
Vielen Dank Benny! ...das hat mir Tim früher auch immer gesagt, bei den kurzen Klettereinlagen, ...und als er dann endlich mal daher kam, hatten wir den größten Sturm überhaupt, haha. ...LG Sepp PS: ...das war übrigens eine Einladung ; )
Please remember that this will just work in an emergency smooth rappel. A high shock will very probably break the rope, and you can die.
If you wanna load light and still wanna rappel, instead of using the typical 9-11mm rope, you can use a lighter 7.8mm one approved for climbing and rappelling.
Many thanks for watching and not judging but instead informing. Best to you Sepp
@@Waldhandwerk thank you for your appreciation!
If you didn't already, perhaps people would also love a video covering other emergency rappel techniques, such as making a Swiss Seat to rappel with it plus a carabiner, and how we can secure ourselves to the rope for such a descent with a Paracord Marchard or Prussik knot.
And did you check the South African Abseil technique? They improved the classical no-harness double rope rappel.
Best to you, too! =)
PS: There are 2 carabiner variations for emergency rappelling too, to add friction to the descent.
@The Old Leafybeard thanks for the tips and ideas. In my old videos i made some of this abseiling. Take care Sepp
I have a decent background in technical rope rescue. I never begrudge those who are innovative and creative when it comes to anything, and the same goes for on-rope activities. However...this is a really, really bad idea, in my humble opinion. Without going into detail and putting everyone to sleep, there is NO safe working load (SWL) for paracord when it comes to attaching a human being to that line. Even in an "emergency", things can go from bad to life threatening in a second should that line break. Doubling the cord does nothing for the strength, unless you're using two lines, rigged independent of each other. And attaching it to a tree with abrasive bark and no protection is just asking for a catastrophic failure. When you add in the fact that knots reduce the minimum breaking strength (MBS) of any cordage/rope by 30% to nearly 50%, you're talking SCARY weight limits. Add in heat from friction, abrasion and shock loading and you better hope you've made peace with your Higher Power of choice. On top of it all, using a carabiner as a rappel device--even with rope designed for this sort of use--is a dicey endeavor. Unless I'm in a burning building or similar situation, there's no way you could get me on that rig.
Try something like a Black Diamond Alpine Bod Harness, Mammut 6mm Rappel Cord and any variety of rappel devices designed for skinny ropes and you have a solid and safe system that can be stowed in your pack with a minimum of space of weight. Train and practice with your kit in a controlled environment. Do your homework. It's your life, after all.
+hwypilot1 This comment needs to be on to top! As an arborist, recreational climber and trained in basic RAT, I totally agree with hwypilot. Unless you are facing certain death, do not attemt this, for the reasons stated above. At least experiment with it from a safe height - with a backup - and a friend - near a hospital ;-)
interesting and informative comment thanks. what would be an ideal emergency line to carry for emergency rappelling (eg. stuck on ski resort elevator, flaming building ..). What would be the best safe/transportable in your opinion ? are there other options such as metal cables ?thanks
Video: Rappel with 550 paracord ... th-cam.com/video/9AY8YiIdD8A/w-d-xo.html ... spoiler alert, he lives (don't be too quick to draw conclusions about the rope :-)).
I have 2000lb kevlar cord... works great for rappeling...
mountaineering is not a set standard. whatever works works man. he evan said at the beginning; dont try this at home. I have confidence in this system for emergency situations. you have what you have.
"Never let this go, or you will die..." GREAT video! Thank you for sharing.
Zombie Fighter Jango ;) thank you for watching! All the best, Sepp
Please don't delete this video, it's in my survival playlist for emergency situations.
Thank you for the great video. How hot did the carabiner get?
Many thanks, ...very warm but still tangible? ;) Best wishes, Sepp
Ok, because I had read that aluminum got almost too hot to touch on paracord rappelling but the guy doing it had it coiled (one strand) around the carabiner about 6x; he didn't have your setup, and he only came down about 15ft. So let's say you're trying to rappel off of the 4th floor of a burning building--no other way out--your method would be the best?
Wutzthedeal ;) ...if i would have to flee from a fire and just 18th of paracord with one carabiner or metall ring, ...yes. At least now i would feel "save" to abseil my little childrens in such a situation. ...hope im never in ;) Take care.
Thank you, Sepp. Kev
How much weight does the paracord hold before breaking?
I sense that the Zeppelin loop knot is safer than the bowline.
Am I correct?
Nice video anyway.
Prost :)
Cool knot! Thanks did not know this one. Glad i suvived ;) Take care, Sepp
Have you every done it on a free air descent? If you have enough cord, wouldnt it better if you double it? I mean 2 strings ?
Thank you very much, glad you liked it. All the best, Sepp
Did you say this was with German paracord ? Is it any thicker or tougher than the American stuff ? I wouldn't want to do this with the line unprotected on the tree, as you could very easily abrade through it. Very cool though !
Thank you for teaching this! Sir I believe this could be very important to use in a emergency.
Many thanks for watching, best to you Kevin! Sepp
Why do you not use a backpack or gloves?
Klasse einfach toll und auch verrückt. Was ist das für seil und wo bekommt man es?
So it is my good friend Tony! Thanks for watching.
I agree with this guy from the blade forums:
"I rappell quite a bit and you can go all the way down to a 5mm cord as long as the working load (15% of tensile strength) is more than your weight and equipment combined (specifically spectra type cords). However, consider the friction and abrasion of the cord going over the cliff or ledge, a tiny scrape may cause the cord to fail critically. Anything under a 8mm cord will require a Personal Escape descender which is smaller than a regular descender and specifically designed for thinner ropes.
However, anything under an 8mm personal escape rope is taking your life in your hands... rappelling with this equipment should be done only if certain death is guaranteed if you do not escape. Paracord should never be used for rappelling because tensile strength is 550lbs which means the working strength is only 82 lbs. Also, Paracord is not a static line. Dynamic rope is very very bad for rappelling as it will stretch and bounce and may snap after a few bounds.
Also consider if rappelling out of a burning building, that ropes are highly inflammable and will melt under relative low heat."
Sincerely yours
John McClimbson, a *refined* /r/climbing user
interesting and informative comment thanks. what would be an ideal emergency line to carry for emergency rappelling (eg. stuck on ski resort elevator, flaming building ..). What would be the best safe/transportable in your opinion ? are there other options such as metal cables ?thanks
Thank you so much Rob, glad you liked it! Stay safe and get well soon with your hand, Sepp
Thank you very much Thomas! ...good tip and very kind comment. Have a great time, Sepp
Why not double up the Paracord that's tied off at the tree as well?
Hi thanks for watching. I think on the one hand it was too short and on the other hand it would have been difficult to get the rope back from below. Iv you want it back ;) Take care, Sepp
Hi, I was away for just a few hours and with this string I could not make jumps, no fast repelling, step by step and it worked. ATB Sepp
Thank you very much Lonnie! Glad you liked it.
Hab nochmal nachgedacht und ich meine, man könnte aus einem der Seilenden auch noch solch einen Sicherungsprusik konstruieren. Bei der Dicke eines Seiles zwar nicht so toll, aber bei dünneren Reepschnüren sollte da etwas machbar sein.
Vielleicht probier ich mal was aus ...
VG, Tim
Glad you liked it Allen! All the best, Sepp
Thank you very much. Glad you liked it. ATB Sepp
how are you still alive?
; ) thanks im fine. I hope the same your you Sam. ATB Sepp
Waldhandwerk
:)
Thank you Ben.
I heard about a guy who got seriously injured rappelling with paracord. He only lived because the paramedics were very close when it happened. For one-time emergency use, I am going to buy some climbing accessory cord to have with me. It has a tensile strength of thousands of pounds, even though it is rather thin.
You´re right Scott ; ) Take care, Sepp
Danke Remo, nett wenn´s Dir gefallen hat!
Thank you very much Paul! ...have a great time, Sepp
Hallo, vielen Dank für Deinen Kommentar und Deine Erfahrung. Alles Gute, Sepp
Hi Sam, yes, the shop had no paracord at this time and told me the german paracord has the same stats. 220 kg strongness and so on. I think it has also just 4 or 5 mm thinkess. Happy Weekend, Sepp
Vielen Dank lieber Marcus auch für Deine netten Rat! Schönen Tag mein Freund, Sepp
Thank you very much Wyatt!
Hello Robert, ...thank you very much. Have a great Day, Sepp
Hello, ...thank you very much. Happy Holidays, Sepp
Sepp, meinst Du mit solchen kurzen Klettereinlagen den fast Absturz ;-) aus Deinem Video "Bushcraft with Adventure stuff", wo Dich Dein Freund David mit selbstgebauten Eispickeln begleitet? Da dachte ich auch,gewagt, gewagt.
Oh :) Deine Einladung nehme ich sehr gerne an.
LG Benny
Thanks, my friend. All the best, Sepp
Hallo Volker, mein guter Freund, freut mich wenn es Dir zugesagt hat. ...viel Spaß und gebt auf Euch acht, Sepp
Danke Dir mein Freund. Schöne Zeit, Sepp
Hallo Stephan mein guter Freund ; ) Danke für Deinen Kommentar. ...wenn Sandra das Video mal anschaut ist es vielleicht besser ich geh derweil mit den Kindern spazieren ; )) Alles Gute, Sepp
Thank you so much Colin, glad you find it interesting. Happy Day, Sepp
Glad you made it! The video, and made it down the drop. Scary stuff, but ingenious. Well done as usual.
Thank you so much my good friend, ...also for your ratings! Have a great week, Sepp
Hi, thank you and good decision, ...just heard the first time there is wrong 550 on the market. ...Have a great Day, Sepp
Thank you very much Jeremy!
Really good advice and great video Sepp..Many thanks. Paul.
Thank you.
Vielen Dank Benedikt, ...so ist es. Alles Gute mein Freund, Sepp
Thank you very much. Have a fine Day Mate.
nice nice sepp well done. But you really have consider getting a go pro video camera. now that you have started to extreme bushcraft . regards Adrian
Risky, risky. There is a right way to do climbing experiments. Best to do your experimenting with a seperate belay from a friend and wear a helmet. You could survive the fall, but not if you hit your head and not if do not have a friend to provide aid and get help.
Yeah i have a very simular setup to his in a little kit i keep in my pack but its mostly for gear or for rappelling situations where the ground is still supporting a large portion of my wieght
Cool video!
Thanks
Thanks a lot my good friend Brett. ...ok i will. Best wishes, Sepp
Thank you very much Denis ; ) ...Have a good time, Sepp
Vielen Dank Tomek, schönen Abend mein Freund!
Hey sepp this was cool to watch I've never seen this done with paracord
Hallo Marc, vielen Dank, nett wenn´s Dir gefallen hat. Lieber Gruß Sepp
Can you repel using 550 paracord? Well, you can. But you would be a fool to do so.
I speak as a previous owner of a rock climbing gym. We are very well drilled in safety with rope work.
Vielen Dank mein Freund Nick! Have a fine Day, Sepp
Hallo Daniel, danke für´s zuschauen und kommentieren. ...eingeschnitten zum Glück gar nicht, es war relativ einfach sich mit einer Hand zu sichern. ...aber klar, das gezeigte ist die allerletzte Lösung ...viel kann man da nicht mehr weglassen, haha. Kameras und Mikro usw. ist sicher immer eine Schwachstelle bei mir. Mal sehen ; ) irgendwann bin ich ja sogar HD geworden ; )) LG Sepp
Thank you so much my dear friend Jim. ...you´re always welcome ; ) All the best, Sepp
Great video Sepp, enjoyed it very much...
Hi Larry, my dear friend, thank you so much! ...very good to hear from you again, hope everything is fine for you and yours! ...best wishes, Sepp
Thank you Tamar ; ) All the best, Sepp
Hallo Gü mein guter Freund, ...die Hoffnung mir Dir mal wieder los zu starten hält mich bestimmt am Leben ; )) Danke und lass es Dir gut gehen, Sepp
Thank you Géza, glad you liked it. More hiking the climbing, "our" Mountains in Salzburg and Tyrol, ...between 2300 and 2800 metres. Have a good week, Sepp
Good idea for an emergency, just worry about friction. Paracord will cut itself, but since your rappelling I guess it doesnt wear in the same spot.
Hi my friend, thanks for watching. Take care, Sepp
Waldhandwerk Keep up the great videos! Be safe out there!
Servus Phil, ...vielen Dank mein Freund! Schönen Tag, Sepp
Thank you so much my good friend Hardy. Have a fine Day, Sepp
Thanks a lot my friend.
Hi, thanks for watching, ...yes in this video watch?v=OuXSOXrx4NQ for a few meters. We had it double, around a tree, to get the rope back after repelling. All the best, Sepp
Glad you did it; now I don't have to. Thanks.
Hehe many thanks Stephen, best comment so far ;) Take care, Sepp
Hi Nick, thank you so much my good friend, i will (try ; ) All the best, Sepp
Freut mich wenn´s Dir gefallen hat Stefan ; ) ...zugegeben bushcrafte ich lieber, aber seit ich hier etwas öffentlich geworden bin ist das nicht mehr so leicht ; )) LG Sepp
You need redundancy in your anchoring line!! I can't believe you went over with a SINGLE LINE holding you to the tree! People die here in Colorado literally every year for reasons just like that.
Soniti1324 Extremely dangerous and risky. But the poster DOES state that this technique is to be used as a last resort and in extreme emergencies. If the Boogie men are about to get you and this is your only escape option.... then you would probably do it.
sir technique is right to use double paracord but paracord stress point is around circle where paracord act as single . you should encirle the tree with both cords running same side and the making the notch. its your luck you won't slip iand fall n the way and able to posted the video otherwise in slip/fall situation force on cord will be weight multiplies speed of falling and that will be more than 250kg which 550 rated at.
@@sukhbirsingh9798 I agree the line was not doubled all the way. I would probably double up the cord all the way and start to handle it as a single rope. Loop around the tree like 3 times before tying off, to minimize possibility of moving under load. Also, recovering your cord after emergency rappel may not be a critical aspect compared to the marginal safety anyway, so I would probably make a static fix a the anchor. Last resort solution, sure.
Hallo mein Freund, ...danke für´s zuschauen und Deinen coolen Kommentar. Freut mich wenn´s Dir gefallen hat ; ) Alles Gute, Sepp
Awesome video, Sepp! BE CAREFUL! I selfishly want to keep watching your videos, so stay alive and keep making them! Really cool technique.
Thank you so much my good friend. Have a fine Day, Sepp
Danke Matze
; ) ...thanks a lot my good friend Bill. Stay safe, Sepp
...thanks for watching my´friend. Good decision ; ) Stay safe, Sepp
Very awesome Sepp! You be careful out there my friend!
Herzlichen Dank Tito, ...sehr nett von Dir, ...ganz so wie ich Dich kennen lernen durfte. Lieber Gruß an Euch, Sepp
Hello, thanks for watching and commenting. ...no special reason, maybe because this is the easiest and fastest seat I know, just one loop not much rope work. Happy 2013, Sepp
S**t got real @6:12 haha awesome video man, thank you
James Blake Vignola Thanks for watching James 😉
Hallo Sepp, ich muss sagen das ich deine Videos sehr schätze und bin froh das du hier allen mitgeteilt hast dieses nicht Zuhause zu probieren. DAS WAR SEHR RISKANT-ich bin früher viel geklettert und habe schon so manches Glück gehabt mit Seilen aber ich würde WIRKLICH nur im Notfall Paracord mein Leben anvertrauen. Wie gesagt sehr Riskant
Debi my friend, thanks, very thoughtful of you. Happy New Year, Sepp
Glad you liked it my good friend!
Thank you for watching and commenting my good friend David ; )
Vielen Dank mein guter Freund, das gleiche an Dich! LG Sepp
Hallo Sepp!
Schönes Video und tolle Ecke, aber bei Paracord weiß man kaum, was man da für Qualität kriegt, während Reepschnur (5mm oder mehr) garantiert und zertifiziert so um die 5,5kN hält und für derlei Einsätze gemacht ist. Paracord (sofern es überhaupt das echte und gute ist), ist dafür gemacht frei in der Luft zu baumeln, also ohne jede Reibung, Auflage, Knotenbremse usw. (Natürlich solte man auch bei Reepschnur/Kletterseil zu mehr als 5mm greifen, aber wir reden ja vom Notfallset hier.)
Well presented! enjoyed watching that Sepp. Didn't know your way of tying a repelling seat =) Thanks for sharing!
Alles gutte, Nick
Great video! I would love to try this with 550 but think I'll add a safety line and friend belay of larger climing rope. I don't trust that the 550 cord I've bought on amazon is really 550# rated!
Hallo Richard, vielen Dank mein Freund, ...ja das würde mir auch gut gefallen, sie wurden anscheinend immer wieder mal zu Wohnzwecken benützt, ...ganz lange her ; )) Alles Gute, Sepp
Im speechless Sepp. Well, other than youre way way more of a man than I am, ha ha. Thanks for showing this emergency technique.
; )) thanks John! ...cool comment. All the best, Sepp
Thanks, my friend Alex, ....you know me to well ; )) All the best, Sepp
Many thanks m´friend. Take care, Sepp
I am glad we got to see this video :))
Don't worry my friend: I don't think I'll do this anytime soon just for fun!
But it is a good thing to know!
Thanks for sharing!
All teh best,
Denis
Vielen Dank Benny! ...das hat mir Tim früher auch immer gesagt, bei den kurzen Klettereinlagen, ...und als er dann endlich mal daher kam, hatten wir den größten Sturm überhaupt, haha. ...LG Sepp PS: ...das war übrigens eine Einladung ; )
Thank you very much, good comment, well said and heard ; )) All the best, Sepp