squad143
Tree Guy
I use the break-a-way bungee laynards and hang it onto my belt with a large Petzl caritool. The large spring gate makes it easy for hooking and unhooking your saw.
I don't know but I would figure at your age and with your wisdom you would NOT strap a saw to your hip with a rope that breaks at 8 grand, but I don't know.
LOL!!! I don't consider mysellf old or wise just stubborn and forgetfull.
But to your point. Though I know others will disagree, I am not a fan of breakaway lanyards. The prevailing thought appears to be that saw snatch can happen at any moment, unbeknownst to the climber. This shouldn't be so. The scenarios that create saw snatch are not that difficult to recognize. This comes back to a pet peeve of mine on the reliance of safety gear at the expense of learning proper technique.
When using a trimming saw, saw snatch is just not something I am overly concerned with. I do use my 660 quite frequently in the blocking down of trunks. I do not want a weak lanyard on that. In that situation I am not concerned with saw snatch because I know I can avoid that. I would be more concerned about putting a heavy saw like that down in a hurry if there were a weak link involved.
I personaaly never said you were old or wise did I?
I was lookind at lanyards and they told me that they were designed to break at below 20 pounds of force or something. Didn't seem like a good thing to hang a saw on to me. With contant regular use I would think it just might have a great chance at getting snagged and breaking or it was just going to break anyway if I dropped the saw.
we ALL do it wrong anyway. To do it completey safe you would need to get someone else to do it. " Oh that looks very dangerous and the price is so high!"
I use the break-a-way bungee laynards and hang it onto my belt with a large Petzl caritool. The large spring gate makes it easy for hooking and unhooking your saw.
But to your point. Though I know others will disagree, I am not a fan of breakaway lanyards. The prevailing thought appears to be that saw snatch can happen at any moment, unbeknownst to the climber. This shouldn't be so. The scenarios that create saw snatch are not that difficult to recognize. This comes back to a pet peeve of mine on the reliance of safety gear at the expense of learning proper technique.
When using a trimming saw, saw snatch is just not something I am overly concerned with. I do use my 660 quite frequently in the blocking down of trunks. I do not want a weak lanyard on that. In that situation I am not concerned with saw snatch because I know I can avoid that. I would be more concerned about putting a heavy saw like that down in a hurry if there were a weak link involved.
Dave
LOL!!! I don't consider mysellf old or wise just stubborn and forgetfull.
But to your point. Though I know others will disagree, I am not a fan of breakaway lanyards. The prevailing thought appears to be that saw snatch can happen at any moment, unbeknownst to the climber. This shouldn't be so. The scenarios that create saw snatch are not that difficult to recognize. This comes back to a pet peeve of mine on the reliance of safety gear at the expense of learning proper technique.
When using a trimming saw, saw snatch is just not something I am overly concerned with. I do use my 660 quite frequently in the blocking down of trunks. I do not want a weak lanyard on that. In that situation I am not concerned with saw snatch because I know I can avoid that. I would be more concerned about putting a heavy saw like that down in a hurry if there were a weak link involved.
Dave
The scenarios that create saw snatch are not that difficult to recognize. This comes back to a pet peeve of mine on the reliance of safety gear at the expense of learning proper technique.
+1
Does anyone know at what force the ring on the back of 200T is supposed to break?
I've sent 2 in my time, both wouldn't run for nothing and it was 100 degrees and I'd had enough, the first was a Homelite Super 2 back in 1989 and the second was a stihl 026 that was scared of heights, both were totaled and the stihl was mine, the Homelite wasn't but I really dropped it if anyone asked...........lolI personally have never sent a saw out of a tree in 15 years of climbing, but have had a few pulled and have seen it many times.
I use the break-a-way bungee laynards and hang it onto my belt with a large Petzl caritool. The large spring gate makes it easy for hooking and unhooking your saw.
+1
Does anyone know at what force the ring on the back of 200T is supposed to break?
I use a home made lanyard, a piece of 1 wide webbing long enough to keep the saw below my feet and give me room to use it.
I've sent 2 in my time, both wouldn't run for nothing and it was 100 degrees and I'd had enough, the first was a Homelite Super 2 back in 1989 and the second was a stihl 026 that was scared of heights, both were totaled and the stihl was mine, the Homelite wasn't but I really dropped it if anyone asked...........lol