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Posted

There's got to be a better way than my nut tool. What are the best tools for the job? I think someone once told me a big spackling knife was the thing to use, chop through the edges of the muck then rip it out. Any thoughts?

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Posted

USE ONE OF THOSE LONG SCRUBBER LIKE DEALS.

 

NARROW BUT LONG.

 

SCRUB WHEN IT IS RAINING.

 

KEEPS THE DUST DOWN.

 

LICHEN CAN SCREW UP YOUR RESPORITORY SYSTEM.

 

 

 

Posted

Checking before I leave for the weekend and I see this post!

 

Ice Axes work great. The old MSR metal ones are the trick. They are hard to find now.

 

Here is the secret:

 

Materials:

Wooden handle

Cheap shelf support

2 bolts w/ nuts

Wild colored paint

 

Tools:

Hand saw

Drill

 

Put it together to look like this!

 

 

shhh ssssssssssssssssssssss

shbhsssssssssssssssssss

shhhssss

shbhsss

.hhh

.hhh

.hhh

.hhh

.hhh

.hhh

.hhh

.hhh

.hhh

.hhh

.hhh

 

H=handle

B=bolt

S=Shelf Support

.=spacer

 

Then use a pipe brush to clean it the grime.

Pliers are handy to pull out stubborn roots and a folding pruning saw is also useful to cut through dirt and roots.

 

Need a place to practice near Seattle?

Last year I cleaned out Pressure Drop. It was incredibly dirty. A great TR and could use some more cleaning as can the two routes to the right which are great TRs and only ok leads

 

Posted

DC's drawing thing of the cleaning tool cracked me up. yelrotflmao.gif

 

I have a thing that is a Japanese Hoe (no jokes! she has a heart of gold!) that I have but haven't cleaned things with. Besides being a really dangerous tool to have tied off to your harness, I expect it to be my friend when I get the chance to clean something like a crack or flake. Anyone used one of these?

Posted

D,

 

Wood handle

toobular steel shaft with an almost U turn bend in the end of it

asymmetric triangular blade

 

It's a cool tool, I have no idea where you get one. Mine is a right handed one and I would love to get a left handed one as I am left handed. Plus I seem to have left mine outside all winter so it's all rusty now.

Posted
allison said:

It's a cool tool, I have no idea where you get one. Mine is a right handed one and I would love to get a left handed one as I am left handed. Plus I seem to have left mine outside all winter so it's all rusty now.

 

Lee Valley tools

Posted

Hardware store sell small tooth brush sized wire brushes... I got one and it is great, even good for little pocket holds, that my big wire brush wont total get down into... Home Depot or Ace buyers should have em...

Posted
erik said:

NO BRUSH LASTS A GOOD SCUBBING

 

CHEAP IS KEY!

 

if the route needs a realy good scrubing then I use one for the route and then have to throw it out... but last year I cleaned an entire boulder with three large and four small brushes, the boulder is bout the size of a 750sqft house...

Posted

A 5" spackle knife is a handy tool -- you can broadly scrape away walls of lichen and you can carve the edges of a crack and pop out plugs of dirt. But you gotta have something stiff and strong, like the pick of an alpine hammer, to really go at a dirt and brush choked crack.

Posted
DCramer said:

Serious testing is in order! This weekend at Index!

 

Erik you're in charge. Make sure Timl and RumR guys go too!

 

HA!

 

MAYBE IN A FEW WEEKS...

 

bigdrink.gif

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