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Old 11-17-2006, 05:30 AM
RonReese RonReese is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2006
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NickfromWI View Post
The milking does stop, usually after the first few long descents. When I get a new climbing line, I purposely just climb on it up a tall tree and descend on it 4 or 5 times to just get it over with. Some people whine a lot about the milking and consider it a sign of bad rope building. It doesn't bother me any.

If a person wants an eye on BOTH ends of a climbing line, I wil splice one side, climb on it a few times, milk the foot or two of cover off, then splice up the other end. If the person is nearby, I'll give it to them to climb on for a few weeks, then splice it after that.

If there's one splice, you've never really milking TOWARD the splice, so you aren't risking making that one looser.

love
nick
Nick,
That makes sense and that's why I wondered why some ropes are listed as spliceable one end only. Looks to me like the process you just described makes splices in both ends feasible. But the guy I talked to at SherrillTree, seemed pretty confident that the problem with the one end only ropes is that some how the core and cover could slip/milk - I don't know, sure didn't make any sense to me.

I'll probably call some other rope manufacturers (Yale and New England) and see what they say about their ropes that are purportedly spliceable only on one end.

I can't see why one couldn't do exactly what you described and have safe splices.
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