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Posted

I tried out a pair of the Camp steel 6-point "half-"pons on Saturday.

 

Took me several attempts to rig it so it wouldn't torque off (the instruction manual is useless / inutile / unbrauchbar / inutil).

 

Some important points:

-The pon shouldn't be too close to the toe.

-The straps need to be tight when the ankle is slightly flexed.

-The straps need to be rigged to keep the rear part of the pon from pulling from the shoe.

 

Once I figured it out, it worked great (better and lighter than an aluminum full pon on bare glacial ice).

 

Tennies and pons aren't that comfortable, but for a small pocket glacier, they work great.

 

Here are some pics of how I rigged the pon:

 

camppons1.jpg

 

camppons2.jpg

 

camppons3.jpg

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Posted

Once again Gary enlightens all us half-wits with detailed instructions on how to perform the simplest of tasks. Gary, what's next? a photo essay on how to put on pants?

Thanks for helping out all us challenged folk though, keep up the good work!

Posted

The traction for traversing and going up was good on moderate frozen snow.

 

They actually performed better than 10-pt Al Stubais on low-angle glacier ice because they were steel.

 

The downsides would be:

-need to face in when going down anything too steep

-can't frontpoint with them

-with tennies, you can get into a situation where the points want to shear through the soft top half-inch of snow but you really can't kick that good of a step

 

Crossing talus, I could sometimes have my heel on the rock and never have the points touch. Kinda neat, I guess.

 

DirtyHarry, figuring out how to put these pons on tennies in such a way that they wouldn't pop off was not a simple task. Go fuck yourself. Or a sheep. Whatever you find first.

Posted

DirtyHarry, figuring out how to put these pons on tennies in such a way that they wouldn't pop off was not a simple task.

 

Yeah, looks like fucking rocket science to me. Did you have to ask your advisor for help?

Posted

Alpinfox, if I put the back strap around my tennie, it would slip up to my ankle, and then the pon would pop off. Have a better idea?

 

It actually wasn't uncomfortable on my Achilles (in the mtns I was wearing a pair of socks).

 

The previous thread, which I did not know about (thanks Fern) looks like it has a similar rigging.

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

I was doing a seated glissade with my Camp Al crampons on the back of my pack. It wasn't until I got back to the car that I realized that one crampon must have caught on something, breaking the adjustment bar. I now have one and a half Camp Al crampons. Lighter is righter!

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