by Adam » Tue Apr 22, 2008 12:17 pm
seeing this reminds me that i wanted to spread the knowledge of a near-accident Rodney and I witnessed in red river gorge a few weeks ago.
this guy was leading a route and one of the draws was two draws together to make a longer draw to make the clip easier. he made it to that draw and took to rest. when he started climbing again he made it up to the next bolt (about 10' above the extended draw) and was too pumped/sketched to clip so he just decided to take the fall. so he jumped, and when the rope went tight on the extended draw it suddenly ripped apart and he fell another 15 feet and swung upside down. he smacked his back on the rock but managed to avoid hitting his head and was 'ok'. he probably was going to be sore for the next week but he shook it off pretty well.
now, to explain why this happened...
from the ground the extended draw looked funny, but it being 30 feet away i couldn't really tell why. it turns out he had the lower draw's top biner clipped into the upper loop of the upper draw. so when the rope went tight, the upper biner of the lower draw loaded the threads of the upper draw and sliced right through them. we couldn't believe our eyes at the time b/c we didn't know exactly how it had been set up (we found out later from a guy who had climbed the route the day before). the correct way to use two quickdraws to make an extended draw is to clip the lower biner of the upper draw into the upper loop of the lower draw. i'll post some example pictures when i get home.
so moral of the story is, even if there are 'perma-draws' on a route, or just draws someone left b/c they are working a route, don't assume they're set up correctly. always double check each piece of protection.