Well put Greg: calm, contemplative, factual, non-speculative.
I agree with all of it (Though, at this time, I will not weigh in on bolted rap stations in general. I feel they aren't the main point of this thread and may be clouding some peoples interpretations.) and want to draw particular attention to
greg wrote:4. When you get to the block that encroaches on the arête don’t go around it to the left. Instead go up and over it staying just left of the short off width. This actually seems to be the weakness as there are big holds and bomber feet not to mention that is a really cool move. From this line the DDT bolt on the arête is not within reach. If you did move off route, clip it, take that line and fall going over the block (crux) you would get slammed into the arête and be looking for a medic.
I also interpret the SEE route description (from the 4 most recent guidebooks) to stay straight up the weakness and not step left around the block referred to in your 4th point. I've always climbed it straight up, and don't recall ever having to go left when cleaning another's gear. It's the logical path: point of least resistance, minimizes rope drag, safest fall. I don't usually shy away from offwidths either -I actually enjoy them.
also
Greg H wrote:If someone thinks the bolts aren’t needed, prove it by climbing the route without clipping the bolts and placing gear on SEE instead.
and be sure to stay on DDT, while reaching said placements.