BEE-LAY-ING. WHat the hell is that? Can't I just hold the ropes in my hand and just grip it hard you if you fall. Funny how 100% of respondent anwered yes to your question. Anyways I'm bored so I figured i'd shoot my mouth off for a few minutes.
granite_grrl wrote:I was thinking of getting a set (the Mammut Gennesis maybe?), but I don't need the dry treatment if I'm going to use them for rock.
I don't think I've seen them non-dry, are there some out there where I could save a few bucks by not getting the dry treatment?
How much do you think you are gonna save? I suggest not buying coffee for a week to ofset the cost difference. What I'm trying to say is that the price difference would be under 25$ a rope (that is what it is for a 10.5 mm rope it could be less for a skinnier rope). The dry treatment is nice if you happen to climb in wet weather and I think (you can correct me if i'm wrong but) the "dry treatment helps optimise handling, abrasion resistance, dirt resistance and life span" (from the Mammut website which could be just marketing trickery but hey i'd buy into that for 25$).
To answer the first question. I'm a big fan of the 8.5 genesis. Unfortunatly good luck finding a 60m. MEC is out and so are other stores in the Calgary area.
I sorta agree with Shawn on the 8mm being too small. My reason being is that a rock edge is more common in summer than in winter.
Oh and about the slippery sheat. I would assume you are reffering to abseiling (its a fun word to say, try it) with one of those ropes. Another thing, for those of you with Reverso's out there I would think twice about using it in autoblock with ropes smaller than 8.5mm. Petzl says its OK for 8mm but it just doesn't seem right.
Mathieu