Burnham
Woods walker
Black Diamond recently ran some drop tests to quantify to a degree a known characteristic of ropes...that is, a rope increasingly loses elasticity across a series of drops/falls that happen one closely following another. These guys were looking at it from the perspective of sport rock climbers, which doesn't translate to how we tree climbers use our lifelines...but it occurred to me that it does relate closely to how we use our rigging lines.
The bottom line is, repeated loads cause the rope to lose the ability to stretch unless it's given time to rest between the loads. Now we can't be putting our rigging lines down for a 2 hour nap after each catch
, but we should be considering this phenomenon when we think about the loads we're putting on our rigging gear in the course of a removal.
Think about it...as we get further down the spar, blocking off nuggets with negative rigging, we tend to be increasing the loads as we get into bigger wood, all the while our bull rope is getting less stretchy with each subsequent catch.
Something to consider.
Here's a link to the BD test report.
http://www.blackdiamondequipment.co...tent=main+promo&utm_campaign=qc+lab-rope+rest
The bottom line is, repeated loads cause the rope to lose the ability to stretch unless it's given time to rest between the loads. Now we can't be putting our rigging lines down for a 2 hour nap after each catch

Think about it...as we get further down the spar, blocking off nuggets with negative rigging, we tend to be increasing the loads as we get into bigger wood, all the while our bull rope is getting less stretchy with each subsequent catch.
Something to consider.
Here's a link to the BD test report.
http://www.blackdiamondequipment.co...tent=main+promo&utm_campaign=qc+lab-rope+rest