by john » Fri Jun 24, 2005 8:36 am
I think the fact that the cadaver hands lack pain receptors which is what tells live climbers to let go, adjust ther grip etc. has something to do with why people tape. I agree that there is no doubt that taping does reduce pain while crimping, but I think the conclusion of the article was more to the effect that in a purely failure based analysis when considering full rupture, taping has little to no effect on maximum load a finger may withstand. Which, in some ways is irrelevant agreed, for example most climbers as you say do not tape to prevent rupture, since it typically hurts long befoe then and they stop. But considering that theory mabey taping is a bad idea, since if it is concluded that circumferential taping does not in fact aid in overall strength, but does allow us to limit pain, thus crimp harder, thereby increasing the likelyhood of an injury(obviously not a new idea).
Another interesting point is if you look at where they taped the fingers and consider where the stress is maximum on the tendon and pulley, mabey they noted no increase in max load due to taping because of tape location. I would think that the stress would be maximum in the crimped position on either side of the middle knuckle (where typical bowstringing occurs), they tape only below that knuckle in essence only supporting one side of the tendon, perhaps potentially causeing magnified stresses on the unsupported side. Again though if you strictly support the study and fully believe that tape provides no measureable strength increase it shouldn't matter where you tape.
On another note I was sort of suprise by the average rupture load of 56N. Anyone else?