How strong is a “stabbed” rope?

 

Premium members can read the complete article here:



Scenarios for a “stabbed” rope . . .

  • Top rope ice, climbing, you carelessly swing your tool, and CHUNK, you drive your pick straight into the rope. Whoops!

  • Walking in a rope team on a glacier. A careless step and you stab the rope with your crampon. Whoops!

If you do either of these, does it completely compromise the strength of your rope?

I've always wondered about this, so I tested it on my latest visit to the gear-breaking mad scientist genius Ryan Jenks from HowNOT2.com.

The rope we tested was a Beal Opera 8.5 mm, common for glacier travel.

Disclaimer, yes, results will probably be different depending on rope diameter, size of the spike, type of sheath used in the rope, etc. We had a small sample size. This is what we got, don't take it as gospel. 


Test 1: Crampon stab through the rope?!

Broke at 11.9 kN. It broke in the knot, and NOT in the “stabbed” part of the rope.

That's close to full strength of the rope.

Click image below to see the short video.


Test 2, pounding a nail multiple times through the rope?!

Test 3: Ridiculously beating on the rope like a manic woodpecker in the same spot with an ice tool ?!


Premium members can read the complete article here:


 
Previous
Previous

Rope anchors: the Alex Honnold anchor

Next
Next

Can you girth hitch a Dyneema sling to a picket?