JAshley73
Active member
Anyone played with, or used the Grivel Twin Gate carabiners? General thoughts on them?
I knew about these, and was surprised to stumble upon them at a local outdoor store, so of course I picked one up. Seems like a really neat biner, and pretty quick after some practice. Also seems like a lovely alterative to a screw gate, which I'm fundamentally opposed to**, and would be a good alternative to tri-locks that are susceptible to getting clogged with mud.
Anyone else used these for a while? I'm contemplating adding more of these to my kit, and can't really see a reason not to. (Outside of just the cost of buying a bunch at one time of course...)
For the record, I did a search and found this thread from a decade ago. Not much seems to have been said about them however.
** As a career machinist, I'm very, very familiar with both making, and using threaded connections. Any tight-clearance thread will clog and seize with debris. To be made to function with debris, the thread clearances must be large, or "loose." Any loose-thread is susceptible to vibration loosening the threaded connection. Thus, eventually the original problem of the gate coming open. And yes, yes, I know all about hanging them "upside down" so that the vibrations cause the threads to loosen, and then work themselves back "down" the biner, thus keeping the gate closed and locked. Just let a guy peacefully enjoy his prejudice against screw-locks... LOL
I knew about these, and was surprised to stumble upon them at a local outdoor store, so of course I picked one up. Seems like a really neat biner, and pretty quick after some practice. Also seems like a lovely alterative to a screw gate, which I'm fundamentally opposed to**, and would be a good alternative to tri-locks that are susceptible to getting clogged with mud.
Anyone else used these for a while? I'm contemplating adding more of these to my kit, and can't really see a reason not to. (Outside of just the cost of buying a bunch at one time of course...)
For the record, I did a search and found this thread from a decade ago. Not much seems to have been said about them however.
** As a career machinist, I'm very, very familiar with both making, and using threaded connections. Any tight-clearance thread will clog and seize with debris. To be made to function with debris, the thread clearances must be large, or "loose." Any loose-thread is susceptible to vibration loosening the threaded connection. Thus, eventually the original problem of the gate coming open. And yes, yes, I know all about hanging them "upside down" so that the vibrations cause the threads to loosen, and then work themselves back "down" the biner, thus keeping the gate closed and locked. Just let a guy peacefully enjoy his prejudice against screw-locks... LOL