christophbenells Posted July 27, 2012 Posted July 27, 2012 well the title says it all...im new to the rock scene (done alot of volcano climbs) i dont really understand the concept...can anyone explain it in super layman terms? Quote
rob Posted July 27, 2012 Posted July 27, 2012 (edited) back-clipped (notice how the rope is "going into" the rock): correct (notice how the rope is "coming out of" the rock): Edited July 27, 2012 by rob Quote
christophbenells Posted July 27, 2012 Author Posted July 27, 2012 thank you very much sir its very clear to me now... Quote
Tyson.g Posted July 27, 2012 Posted July 27, 2012 I use the phrase "rock out" to remind myself when clipping. I have to keep it very very simple as I am gettingold and feeble of mind. Quote
pcg Posted July 27, 2012 Posted July 27, 2012 I'm also relatively new to the rock scene and have also had some confusion on this. It is obvious when sport climbing with short stiff draws, but when trad climbing with long alpine draws that are flopping around and even swinging in the wind, it appears almost impossible to determine when you are backclipped as the rope flopping around can change the orientation. My take on this has been that it is less important in this instance. See below. Is this back-clipped? Comments? Quote
B Deleted_Beck Posted July 28, 2012 Posted July 28, 2012 (edited) Let me preface by saying I'm still pretty noobish too, but I think back-clipping and wrong-siding often get confused... back-clipping is where you run the rope the wrong way through the carabiner. Wrong-siding (yes, I made the term up) is just where you orient the carabiner gate on the "wrong" side, slightly increasing your odds of funky loading during a fall. With alpine draws, it's easier to back-clip and not realize it, because there's a lot more flop in the draw, and under tension, the carabiner will just flip around to the right orientation, making it look like all is good. Then when you fall, the tension is relieved, and the carabiner flips back around and CLINK.... you're no longer clipped. Just have to make sure that you run the rope OUT of the top side of the carabiner's most natural rest position, and you shnould be fine. Actually... yes? I think the two on the bottom ARE back-clipped, pcg -Ben Edited July 28, 2012 by Ben B. Quote
montypiton Posted July 28, 2012 Posted July 28, 2012 pcg - you are correct that back-clipping is much less an issue when you're protecting with long, floppy runners. for placements where you have any doubt, though, consider using a lightweight locking carabiner on the rope end of the sling; or, I've seen some leaders use two carabiners, with gates reversed and opposed. Quote
Sherri Posted July 28, 2012 Posted July 28, 2012 Is this back-clipped? Comments? Good question. At first glance, the angle of the photo combined with the tension on the rope pulling the slings outward made me think they are backclipped. But if I imagine looking at those slings from above when they hanging flat against the wall, the rope would be coming out from the rock. So, I'll say, no, they are not backclipped. Quote
BirdDog Posted July 28, 2012 Posted July 28, 2012 When clipping the rope into the 'biner, the 'biner gate should face away from the direction you are climbing; otherwise it's backclipped and could pop the gate in a fall. On a vertical crack - alternate the gates. Yes pcg, it's more critical on stiff sport draws than alpine draws. Quote
matt_warfield Posted September 17, 2012 Posted September 17, 2012 the spine of the biner and not the gate should always face the route but there are times when convenience reigns. Rock climbing involves risk. I would advise never backclipping on a volcano. Quote
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