• Descent 298 publication date

    Our June/July issue will be published on Saturday 8 June

    Now with four extra pages as standard. If you want to receive it as part of your subscription, make sure you sign up or renew by Monday 27 May.

    Click here for more

Which descender do you use?

Which descender do you use?

  • Petzl Simple

    Votes: 32 29.6%
  • Petzl Stop

    Votes: 49 45.4%
  • Petzl Grigri

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Petzl Rig

    Votes: 5 4.6%
  • Kong Banana

    Votes: 5 4.6%
  • Rack

    Votes: 13 12.0%
  • Other

    Votes: 4 3.7%

  • Total voters
    108

Kenilworth

New member
Rob said:
I answered "Other", but maybe should have ticked "Rack". I use one of these Micro Racks from USA:

bms-r50.jpg
http://onrope1.com/descending-equipment/bms-micro-rack-short/

Small, light, easy to gmaintain, easy to use (y)

My short frame bms has wooden bars. I use the slightly longer bms frame normally since I'm scrawny and usually riding on cruddy 11mm rope. I agree that they are an excellent product.
 

pwhole

Well-known member
I've been thinking about one of these for a while now - are they still reasonably controllable on something like 9mm? Presumably it's just a case of nipping up the bars a bit for thinner rope? Or does a single turn around the hyper-bar before the braking krab help more? I'm quite happy with stainless friction surfaces as opposed to aluminium.
 

Kenilworth

New member
pwhole said:
I've been thinking about one of these for a while now - are they still reasonably controllable on something like 9mm? Presumably it's just a case of nipping up the bars a bit for thinner rope? Or does a single turn around the hyper-bar before the braking krab help more? I'm quite happy with stainless friction surfaces as opposed to aluminium.

Very controllable with 9mm. There is no need to adjust bars, unlike a traditional long frame rack. In fact it's not really possible to spread or jam the bars. I have never seen anyone use a micro rack with a braking carabiner. The hyperbar is more than adequate to provide whatever friction is needed. I do have opposed hyperbars in both the top and third position, but this is to enable quick "soft" lockoffs for changeovers or examining/navigating my route. While you easily could ride with both hyperbars engaged, I've never had any need to.
 

Rob

Well-known member
Same, no probs with adjustability and never used a breaking krab. The third hyperbar option looks useful for lockoffs  (y)
 

pwhole

Well-known member
Thanks both for the info, and no need for a braking krab is even better as it's one less bit of kit on the D-ring, though I did recently invest in a brand-new Raumer Handy. I'm sure I could offload that ;)
 
Top