Sunday, September 12, 2010

Another critical look at Ice tools and Umbilicals






Ally Swinton climbing. Photo courtesy of Dave Searle




I get the, "which ice tool and whichumbilical," question at least a couple of timesa week.



My 2 cent on the subject.



It is ridiculous, silly really. As in dumb, dumb and dumber.



Not the question or those asking, but the guys building this stuff.



Like crampons there needs to be a norm in the industry. Best system yet I have seen? An incidentally themost fail proof system to date?



Petzl Nomic (or Ergo) with a Blue Ice Boa leash. And I have climbed on most everything available. From 30+ year old home made umbilicals to the first Grivel clip on versions to the latest versions from Grivel and BD.



Here is why I think the Nomic/ Boa comboshould and could be the norm if the manufactures would simply *think* about the process for a minute. Huge disserviceto us not to IMO.



Hole in handle and full strength? Easy to do in any axe during production. Check

Eliminates any issues with dropped/disconnected biners. Check

Easy and quick on and off the tools. Seconds in fact.Check

As strong andas simple as you want to make the nylon. Check

Cheap to manufacture.Check



Grivel made the first commerical umbilicals I am aware of. At some point early onthey offered a wire gate biner with a really stiff gate as the attachment method. Wire gate biners will not reliably stay attached to a fixed clip in point on a tool Theywill eventually unlatch and lever off. Common occurance now.



Grivel solved the problem quickly by addinga locking screw gate biner instead of the wire gate.

BD simplycopied the earlier and faulty Grivel system. Prone to failure from day one. Stiffening the wire gate is not the answer. Just a band aid actually.



I know of one fatal fall ice climbing last season whereumbilicals were in use. I've been told that on inspection after the fall one tool had disconnected entirely from the tool and bothgates on the umbilicals were on the wrong side of the biner gate opening.



One has to wonder if a more reliableattachmentsystemmight haveresulted in a shorter,more controlledinitial fall, with less tramaticresults.



The current commercial umbilicals are not designedto hold a leader fall. But everyone knows that is how they are being used. And have been now for decades. Insurance for the leader to avoid apotential fall and security so a tool isn't dropped.



Easy to solve this problem on any tool with a little redesign of the shaft. Easy to up the strength on the umbilicals by ditching the "biner" of any sort and building from a better and stronger webbing. There is a lot of room for improvement here with both the tool attachment point and the umbilicals themselves.



I've climbed on almost every modern tool. And on every commercial umbilical since the early preproduction and production modelsfrom both Grivel and Black Diamond.With the resulting minor failures as the umbilicals snapped off mid route on many of those combos. It is just happen stance that I like the Nomic and have used he Blue Ice Boa leash. I didn't plan this. It was a first time ice climber (thanks Jim) that showed me a better and cleaner way to lash up the Nomic with a BOA leash. Not the techniqueI was originally using



But there are lots of ways to do this and several decadesofhistory behind it:



http://coldthistle.blogspot.com//03/boa-leash-by-blue-ice.html



http://coldthistle.blogspot.com//01/ice-tool-umbilicals-repost.html



http://coldthistle.blogspot.com//01/umbilicalssomething-to-think-about-and.html



http://coldthistle.blogspot.com//02/curious-case-of-commercial-umbilical.html



http://coldthistle.blogspot.com//04/bd-testswarning-on-umbilicals.html



http://www.summitpost.org/phpBB3/tethers-t59130.html



Then there is the "Best" way.



This is not an endorsement of "just" the Nomic or "just" the Boa leash. It is only a statement onan "easy fix". This is the umbilical style that will works well on that particular style attachment point. It is so simple. Why isn't everyone doing it?













the initial loop in the umbilical leash and a full strength hole milled through thehandle of a Nomic







Webbing flattened and threaded through hole, very easy







Same picture different angle, seconds are all that is required here







Pull the loop through and spread it







Turn the loop back and circle the handle just below the hole







Pull the long side of the leash snug...you are done. This tool is set up for a right hand to keep the webbing bulk to a minimum







"Right hand" toolagain, showing the "smooth" side of the Umbilical that the palm of your hand would go in.







This shows the "bulk" side of the tool. Not all that bulky, really.












Easy on and off in just seconds even after being fully weighted.


Blue Ice Boa leash is currently sold out world wide. Check your dealer's shelf in the EU.

None in North America at the moment.



Seriously, Icouldn't make this stuff up! (Thanks Charlie)

Check out the video below:



http://www.youtube.com/embed/pYr1DVtWujM




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