If I'm not mistaking, the smaller diameter single ropes are mainly geared towards sport climbers and hard sends aren't they? So every little bit of weight and drag helps for sending that 5.14 doesn't it? I guess I'm just not visualizing using a 9.8 glider on "Weeping Whisker" but rather on "Prend Ton Trou 5.13a 60m one pitch" in Kamou. I think it has over 15 draws and it's a full rope length. So I've crunched some numbers for FUN! since it's what I do best.
You've just reached the top of "Prend Ton Trou" which means at this point you are essentially hauling the entire rope. Lets look at three different ropes:
1. Shawn's Mammut Flash Duo 10.5mm weighing in at 69g/m
2. Brent's Maxim Glider 9.8mm weighing in at 65g/m
3. The lightest single rope on the market Mammut Revelation 9.2mm at 54g/m
Total Weights:
1. Flash Duo 9.13 lbs
2. Maxim Glider 8.6 lbs
3. Mammut Revelation 7.14 lbs
Now lets consider a conservative 5 lbs normalized rope drag for all the ropes with the Maxim Glider having 20% less sheath friction than the Flash Duo and the Revelation having 30% less friction than the flash duo. Now stay with me people. Alot of factors are involved in reducing friction. The texture of the sheath, the weight (friction force= coefficient of frictin x weight or normal force), and the surface area. So as the ropes get smaller they have less weight (lower friction) and less area (lower friction because of smaller diameter). So assuming a 20% and 30% reduction on friction is probably conservative. So throw on a smooth sheath onto a much smaller rope and voila. Slippery as KY in the morning.
So back to friction:
1. Flash Duo 9.13 lbs + 5 lbs = 14.13 lbs
2. Maxim Glider 8.6 lbs + 0.8(5 lbs) = 12.6 lbs
3. Mammut Revalation 7.14 lbs + 0.7(5 lbs) = 10.64 lbs
Thus, reaching the top of the 60m climb your total weight added to your body weight for sending this hard route will be:
1. Mammut Flash Duo = 14.13 lbs
2. Maxim Glider = 12.6 lbs (2 lbs less)
3. Mammut Revelation = 10.64 lbs (3.5 lbs less)
If you want to convince yourself that 3.5 lbs makes a difference try sending the hardest problem at the gym with no weight on you. Then send it with 14.13lbs strapped on you and then send it with 10.64lbs.
Hence why I've been skiing so much to lose a measily 5lbs. Also, why you don't see sport climbers sending routes with Gri Gri's and daisy chains and useless crap on their belts. So when people laugh at bare chested boulderers wearing nothing but thin shorts I'd say you'd better consider it as an efficiency thing rather than a fasion statement. But yes of course it's all about looking cool too.