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coolcat83
Feb 6, 2010, 11:47 PM
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http://www.youtube.com/...dW4IJdX_Ayk&NR=1 only a matter of time before they did this, i find the one handed method kinda shady, and he loaded the tibloc wrong. basically a grigri for small diameter ropes. it was first developed for fire bailout.
(This post was edited by coolcat83 on Feb 6, 2010, 11:47 PM)
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scottek67
Feb 7, 2010, 12:10 AM
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so is that just a grigri with a u-bolt installed?
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coolcat83
Feb 7, 2010, 12:11 AM
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sort of, my understanding is that the cam and size are adapted for small diameter tech ropes.
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scottek67
Feb 7, 2010, 12:21 AM
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tanks guys...
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Adk
Feb 7, 2010, 12:23 AM
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and then he says "I'm not even a Petzl guy so there you go!" Nice product
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altelis
Feb 7, 2010, 12:39 AM
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acorneau wrote: scottek67 wrote: so is that just a grigri with a u-bolt installed? It's not just a standard Grigri. The cam is designed for much smaller ropes and the "u-bolt" holds the rope in place. http://petzl.com/...cuation-system-0/exo Actually, it doesn't just hold the rope in place. If you look at even the 1st few seconds of video, you can see that rope goes through it then it is used as a pivot point to redirect the rope up and toward the other side of the device. You can then have the rope running through the same hand you are using to pull back the lever, freeing up the other hand to shoot shit with.
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cintune
Feb 7, 2010, 2:51 AM
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On the ascending bit. kind of funny how he explains that you can either use a sling for a foot loop or run the end of rope up through the tibloc biner for a pulley redirect, but fails to mention doing both together, which actually works really well if you have a sling to start with. But then again, he's not a Petzl guy.
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coolcat83
Feb 7, 2010, 4:32 AM
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acorneau wrote: coolcat83 wrote: ... and he loaded the tibloc wrong. Actually, it's loaded correctly. Look at this picture from the Petzl webpage: [image]http://petzl.com/files/imagecache/product_outdoor_slideshow_image/files/node_media/tibloc_corde.jpg[/image] -or you can read the instructions: http://petzl.com/...%20B01500-020799.pdf hmm odd, you are right, I must have had an older instruction version or something.
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mtnkid85
Feb 7, 2010, 5:23 AM
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lol, that guy is so tactical it hurts! Petzl modified device is cool though.
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JimTitt
Feb 7, 2010, 9:17 AM
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The cam itself isnīt modified (at least as far as I could tell by just eyeballing one), the main difference is the pin which holds the rope into the cam which you can see to the left of the outgoing rope. This forces the rope to contact the cam considerably more than in the standard version and itself provides quite a lot of friction. Developed by some guy in the NYC Fire Service if I remember correctly.
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angry
Feb 7, 2010, 2:30 PM
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I've rapped with an 8mm rope and grigri before. It locks up but not quite as quickly. Once locked, it's just as positive as with a larger rope. It's not necessary to change the cam, just throw in a couple friction points. Am I looking at this correctly? You can't open the grigri? So to reload it you'd have to pull the rope back through then coil it back into the bag? I guess this kit probably costs $300 or so, in perspective of just how much the military spends I guess these could be considered disposable.
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colatownkid
Feb 7, 2010, 5:56 PM
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angry wrote: I've rapped with an 8mm rope and grigri before. It locks up but not quite as quickly. Once locked, it's just as positive as with a larger rope. It's not necessary to change the cam, just throw in a couple friction points. Am I looking at this correctly? You can't open the grigri? So to reload it you'd have to pull the rope back through then coil it back into the bag? I guess this kit probably costs $300 or so, in perspective of just how much the military spends I guess these could be considered disposable. he never showed how to load the device. but the photo upthread shows a pretty normal looking grigri with the addition of the u-bolt. i imagine you could have the u-bolt attached to just the opening plate of the device without having to go all the way through both sides, allowing you to load it like normal.
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JimTitt
Feb 8, 2010, 10:01 AM
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The pin on the cam means you have to thread the rope through but I guess those guys are strong enough to manage this, according to Petzl it is a one-time use object anyway! $300 probably doesnīt buy the bag! Retail in Europe is $450 or so. Why do those guys wear all black stuff when they are going down a white concrete building in broad daylight?
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JimTitt
Feb 8, 2010, 2:28 PM
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Guess it depends on your interpretation of the English language! "This system must be immediately retired after it has been used for a real escape, or when it is determined to be no longer safe for use." The first clause of the sentence says it is single use, the second says if it is no longer safe. The first clause (the dependent clause) has been seperated from the second (the independent clause) by a comma. If Petzl want to say the item can be used after more than one use but if undamaged they should replace the comma and the `orī with `andī.
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altelis
Feb 8, 2010, 3:26 PM
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JimTitt wrote: Guess it depends on your interpretation of the English language! "This system must be immediately retired after it has been used for a real escape, or when it is determined to be no longer safe for use." The first clause of the sentence says it is single use, the second says if it is no longer safe. The first clause (the dependent clause) has been seperated from the second (the independent clause) by a comma. If Petzl want to say the item can be used after more than one use but if undamaged they should replace the comma and the `orī with `andī. Its not about INTERPRETATION, its about understanding the different systems this device is used for. There is the EXO tactical and the EXO escape. The EXO was first developed by the NYFD & Petzl as a means for a quickly deployable emergency escape system out of burning buildings. It comes pre-rigged in a bag with a massive hook at the end for use against a window ledge. The whole thing sits prerigged on a harness, in a bag, to be deployed last second. Its also on some SUPER heat resistant cord. There is also the tactical. Exact same device (the descender part) as the escape, just with a different use in mind, so the rope and attachment system it comes w/ is different. No need for the massive price tag associated with the heat resistant rope. My understanding is that "escape" refers to use in an emergent fire situation where the rappel may be done quickly. Otherwise you can use it many times in a tactical situation. At least that's my understanding.
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Adk
Feb 8, 2010, 6:46 PM
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JimTitt wrote: "This system must be immediately retired after it has been used for a real escape, or when it is determined to be no longer safe for use." . But if you read on they talk about it used in training. This item is not used once for training and then disposed of. I wonder why it's good to reuse for training yet not in a real escape. Must be they don't want you using a burnt rope again! Fact of the matter is it is a reusable/ repackagable item.
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JimTitt
Feb 8, 2010, 7:17 PM
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Iīll give you that one! The link above and when I search gets me into the Petzl home website where they only discuss the Exo Escape system which is as I described. But on Petzl USA there is the Tactical which as you say is re-usable . The rope appears to be the same, 7,5mm Technora but with a different attatchment. Still donīt know why they wear black on a sunny day though!
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JimTitt
Feb 8, 2010, 8:28 PM
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Thank god for a sensible explanation! I had a thought it was to make their teeth look whiter so they looked all macho and manly when they smiled.
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altelis
Feb 8, 2010, 8:56 PM
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"I was going to get my teeth whitened by I decided to just get a tan instead."
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