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Moss,
I would think you would need a loose friction hitch to pull out the rope. I don't know. One way to find out however.
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Ok, I'm a newbie so let me cautiously ask -- why do you need the friction hitch?
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The hitch is holding your life as you climb (it is the anchor)
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Ok, but a good big stopper knot would not go through a good pulley, would it? The other idea you seem to suggest is something like the following?
http://www.newtribe.com/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=21&products_id=35
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When you pull the rope UP you pull the throw line. The knot, I assume, is for safety when climbing. There will be no knot at the other end of the rope, allowing the climber to pull it up to him/her, through the hitch and the pulley. Interesting option. The only change I would make would be to use a hitch tending pulley (PMP). It will tend the hitch better without allowing it to roll. As far as the hitch itself - maybe a klemheist?
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But what you suggest gives ideas for a easily attachable and removable rope clamp, maybe milled from a small block of aluminum that would substitute for the stopper knot and then a custom pulley that would have a flat surface on one side for the rope clamp to rest against. Simple is definitely better, if the hitch can be taken out of the equation and replaced with small sturdy chunks of hardware with no wearable or moving parts (except the wheel in the pulley), all the better.
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Moss, you mentioned the possibility of the end of the rope getting snagged around something as it drops from the climber to the ground before being pulled through the friction hitch.
Thinking laterally for a moment, couldn't you leave the other end of the rope tied around the base of the tree and advance the other end? I mean, if you're doing short pitches once in the branches then a 100m rope should suffice for trees of up to, say 85m. The problem is how to ensure that the rope doesn't drop to the ground by accident after you've taken the other end up,
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moss wrote:
But what you suggest gives ideas for a easily attachable and removable rope clamp, maybe milled from a small block of aluminum that would substitute for the stopper knot and then a custom pulley that would have a flat surface on one side for the rope clamp to rest against. Simple is definitely better, if the hitch can be taken out of the equation and replaced with small sturdy chunks of hardware with no wearable or moving parts (except the wheel in the pulley), all the better.
Well, here's simple... a sturdy pulley, a small stack of hefty steel fender washers with 1/2\" holes, and a triple overhand stopper with a three foot tail.
Edit: to prevent the chance of snags you'd probably need to lower the end of the rope on throwline as the opposite end is being pulled up.
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That's the direction I'm thinking now (the stack of washers concept except mill it from aluminum round stock to keep it light). I think I mentioned the throwline for dropping the top end of the rope in my original post
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