Thank you so much for the good job you do. i knew two ways to pass the knots with victim, changing the height of the knot with a blocker or with a bigger butterfly knot, now i have another option. what a good job, congratulations
Si tienes mucha cuerda por encima, con la elongación tendrías un problema. Puedes hacerlo igual pero el ID ponerlo en la misma cuerda que bajas , así siempre tienes la tensión en la cuerda y no se te iría para arriba el puño . Gracias por los vídeos. Vienes a Sevilla este ańo?
Absolutely! I would consider that one of the most advanced ways. I used it 3 assessments ago! As you may have notices I did not go to Seville. Hopefully next year again..
It is good to see different modes of access, however, I believe that taking into account the elasticity of the rope is essential, in this case there is about 3 meters of rope above, however, scenarios with more than 20 meters of rope above would result in the elevator being wrist braking the maneuver and connected to the belt, braking the rescue. Just as a simple rescue on the chest lift can turn into a mess when carried out with more than 50 meters of ropes above, therefore, if the descender is not installed before removing the chest lift, the maneuver could get worse and complicate the operation. rescue. In this case, it is important to mention that this example is only valid for rescues with a maximum of 5 meters of ropes above so that the rescuer does not block the sequence and unfortunately become complicated.
There is some text getting lost in translation I think and from what I understand, you are completely correct. There is hardly ever any training done that takes rope stretch in account. For passing the knots I showed one or two options for that I think. You can mover the knot up and park the CS in a grillon. And you could create a re-anchor with a hand ascender. Although I did not mention that this would be good for a long rope scenario in the video. With regards to the croll rescue.... Well, check this video I released 2 weeks ago: th-cam.com/video/uCiQQXzeTWk/w-d-xo.htmlsi=VzPgW8PZbigH-3v2 ;-) Thank you for your input.
Looking very much forward to the other two methods! I have never seen this one but Im a little sceptcal to be honest… Anyhow very cool video as always :)
@@TheRopeAccessChannel Because if there is a lot of rope above you and your foot gets stuck in the footloop, to my understanding this will lead to big trouble hahaha To me it seems that it relies on the stretch in the backup rope being so little that your weight is almost fully on it before you fully release the footloop...
Gotta put something on before you take something off. Great video!
You got that right!
Thank you so much for the good job you do. i knew two ways to pass the knots with victim, changing the height of the knot with a blocker or with a bigger butterfly knot, now i have another option. what a good job, congratulations
Thank you!🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼. I have two more ways for you👊🏻👊🏻😜
Excellent video man! Always good to see different and new techniques and share the knowledge. Keep up the videos man, we all enjoy!
Thanks
Thanks! Will do! Thank you for commenting 👍🏻👍🏻🙏🏼🙏🏼
Si tienes mucha cuerda por encima, con la elongación tendrías un problema. Puedes hacerlo igual pero el ID ponerlo en la misma cuerda que bajas , así siempre tienes la tensión en la cuerda y no se te iría para arriba el puño . Gracias por los vídeos. Vienes a Sevilla este ańo?
Absolutely! I would consider that one of the most advanced ways. I used it 3 assessments ago!
As you may have notices I did not go to Seville. Hopefully next year again..
pretty good method 👍🏻
Thanks 🙏🏼😃🙏🏼
It is good to see different modes of access, however, I believe that taking into account the elasticity of the rope is essential, in this case there is about 3 meters of rope above, however, scenarios with more than 20 meters of rope above would result in the elevator being wrist braking the maneuver and connected to the belt, braking the rescue.
Just as a simple rescue on the chest lift can turn into a mess when carried out with more than 50 meters of ropes above, therefore, if the descender is not installed before removing the chest lift, the maneuver could get worse and complicate the operation. rescue.
In this case, it is important to mention that this example is only valid for rescues with a maximum of 5 meters of ropes above so that the rescuer does not block the sequence and unfortunately become complicated.
There is some text getting lost in translation I think and from what I understand, you are completely correct. There is hardly ever any training done that takes rope stretch in account. For passing the knots I showed one or two options for that I think. You can mover the knot up and park the CS in a grillon. And you could create a re-anchor with a hand ascender. Although I did not mention that this would be good for a long rope scenario in the video.
With regards to the croll rescue.... Well, check this video I released 2 weeks ago:
th-cam.com/video/uCiQQXzeTWk/w-d-xo.htmlsi=VzPgW8PZbigH-3v2 ;-)
Thank you for your input.
Looking very much forward to the other two methods!
I have never seen this one but Im a little sceptcal to be honest…
Anyhow very cool video as always :)
Thanks I guess ;-)
Why are you skeptical about this method? I would really like to know👍🏻
@@TheRopeAccessChannel Me too.
@@TheRopeAccessChannel Because if there is a lot of rope above you and your foot gets stuck in the footloop, to my understanding this will lead to big trouble hahaha
To me it seems that it relies on the stretch in the backup rope being so little that your weight is almost fully on it before you fully release the footloop...