SuperDIYer said:
I am a bit baffled by the talk of switching to a DbRT or DdRT once you are up in the tree. Why would I need to do that? What is it about the SRT equipment that makes this undersireable?
You do that because you work the crown while on rope, sinking your flipline for positioning and cutting. The 'equipment' problem is that SRT is viewed from everybody's standpoint from' how does the friction hitch fit into SRT? The 'equipment' problem is that once you learn to climb on 2:1 DdRT, thoughts and possibilites of climbing without the friction hitch, for some reason melt. The equipment is minimal and exceedingly simple. The 'problem' is a mental hurdle, mebbe fear of the unknown. It has nothing to do with the actual gear.
SuperDIYer said:
It appears to be another way to tie into the tree from above, but I would not really be using it to CLIMB.
True, you're climbing the tree, which is going to be the case a lot of the time, especially on the size trees you're beginning with, as well as most all other trees once you've ascended into the crown.
SuperDIYer said:
I guess I see DdRT the same as using REALLY long flipline/lanyard.
The difference being the rope would allow you to rappel out, the flipline being used for immediate zone positioning. For your medium maples, clip the rope to your harness, climb up there, flipline in, drop your rope over a tie-in, clip yourself in (or for the hitch tyer, tie yourself in). At this point you're tied in twice and ready to make a cut. You have just 'switched over'.
SuperDIYer said:
However, looking forward to bigger projects, the prospect of having rope friction in the crotch of the tree is not attractive. Neither am I all that thrilled with the need to use a cambium/friction saver to continue to use that technique without the above concern. I am not REALLY concerned with climbing all that fast, so the fact that this would be a 2:1 system really doesn't concern me.
But a 2:1 system is what you get with DdRT, friction of the rope sliding over the crotch. The prospect of limb or crotch friction is not appealing, yet a 2:1 system is OK. These two sentences collide with each other.
SuperDIYer said:
Reading what I have, the DbRT really looks interesting... footlocking sounds reasonable as the propulsive force, but I find references to needing back ups for doubled-rope ascenders. So do I need to sliding hitches on each segment of rope above those ascenders?
Footlocking can be done on ANY of the three systems, though with the 2:1 traditional friction hitch system you have to footlock two lengths of rope through your feet to gain one length of gain in altitude. It's like walking up a steep sand hill where you go up two steps and come back down one. You'll eventually get up there. This is traditional DdRT.
Maybe instead of our climbing family viewing SRT as some fancy dancy, far-out technique, view the friction hitch system for the inherent limitations it puts on your climbing. SRT is the same steep hill, just firm dirt and rock instead of soft sand.