Dr_Crash Posted May 26, 2004 Posted May 26, 2004 Rodchester, we're saying the same thing. The lawyers uses more words and posted data for those who can't read on Beal's site. RuMR, I'm a bit confused by you. You tell me it's certified as a twin, I said no it's as a half (double) rope, then you lecture me that the Beal site says it's a double. Duh, yes. I'll just ignore the randomization in the rest of this thread. Whoever else, half rope and double rope: same thing. NOLSe, I'd love to see these numbers you asked for. I thought it'd be really tough to make a rope that works well as half (double) and twin, mostly because when both strands would be clipped in together, the impact forces would skyrocket, and then, well, have faith in your protection guys (where's the Eek! graemlin?) drC Quote
RuMR Posted May 26, 2004 Posted May 26, 2004 my bad...i misread your post...we were arguing the same thing...you can still use it as a twin though! Quote
Dustin_B Posted May 27, 2004 Posted May 27, 2004 No. It must pass both test separately. Look at the link. Yeah, read my post again. I know that halfs and twins have different requirements. My point was that if you can take a fall on one rope and it holds (half), then obviously you can take a fall on two of the same ropes (twin) and they will hold (increased impact forces ignored). I'm not talking about the gear failing here, just the rope breakage posibilities. It seems to me that you can always use doubles as twins from a strictly rope strength point of view. But yeah it may put twice the impact force on your pro. Quote
John Frieh Posted May 27, 2004 Posted May 27, 2004 Exactly. And the impact forces do increase greatly, hence the difficulty to get one certified as both a half and twin. Quote
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