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Thread: The Sandtrap
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04-28-2010, 11:42 AM #1
The Sandtrap
I was able to get out on a 10 day trip this month including 7 days on Lake
Powell doing explorations and barely betad canyons. On this trip I was able to
use the sandtrap for the first time. After being shown how to set it up I had
some of the others watch me set it up once or twice to make sure I didn't miss
anything. After this I felt confident setting it up by myself wherever we felt
the geometry was favorable. It is very quick and easy to use.
It doesn't work at every drop but is useful in so many more spots than any other
ghosting technique I've used in the past. The least favorable place to use one
is a chockstone choked constriction as the trap can get tangled in the rocks,
however these are generally the easiest places to throw a sling around one of
those chockstones. Places where you would normally need to build a deadman or
carin anchor (anchors that usually take the most time to build) is usually an
ideal spot to use it, saving HUGE amounts of time. One canyon we did had 9
rappels, all of them off the sandtrap. We would have been in the canyon twice
as long if we were building anchors at all these drops.
The sandtrap is the greatest invention for canyoneering since tubular webbing in
my opinion, it's amazing once you learn how to use it and know its limitations
(don't get too carried away trying to leave no trace or you will get it stuck).
Always back it up until the last person and make sure you don't accidentaly pull
on the pull cord on rappel (that would dump the sand and be very bad).
http://canyoneeringusa.com/shop/prod...roductid=16406
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04-28-2010 11:42 AM # ADS
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04-28-2010, 05:46 PM #2
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04-28-2010, 05:52 PM #3
Before Mark gets all Chevron on me - OK man, I got one for ya. Go ahead and purchase the completion and I'll send it right out.
For the rest of you, probably not available until May 30th ish. Doesn't mean you can't order it - just means you won't get it until it's actually made.
Tom
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04-28-2010, 07:08 PM #4
People on the canyons group have been asking for pictures. Here is a link to one of Dan's albums with pictures. I also added a photo with a description of how it works.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/3583153...7622673362937/
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04-28-2010, 10:19 PM #5
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04-29-2010, 01:44 PM #6
OK... so what does this bad boy cost?
While I admire the ingenuity I'm not a big fan of releasable anchors that drain my pocket book when they fail to release.... at least not when a rock and $1 worth of webbing can be used....
Actually I don't think I've bought webbing in the last 10 years.... I get plenty when cleaning up rat nests I find in the canyons....
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04-29-2010, 04:30 PM #7
One hundred American dollars, less five cents. And, not available until June 1st at the earliest. Orders coming in will be numbered sequentially, and ship in the order received. Started cutting fabric today, but the straps to finish the things won't arrive until May 20th.
Tom
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04-29-2010, 08:04 PM #8
That is a pretty slick design Tom. Question, wouldn't it be smarter to run the rope THROUGH a carabiner or quick link instead of tying your rope directly to the straps? If for some reason, the sand trap gets stuck or doesn't dump the sand or release right, at least you can still retrieve your rope if its simply ran through a quick link instead of tied??
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04-29-2010, 08:14 PM #9
Not sure what I think. I'd like to see it in action sometime though...
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04-29-2010, 09:33 PM #10
I'm totally sold on the thing, except that at the rate I do canyons, it would be pretty darn expensive per canyon. Hmmmmm. I've got some canyons before June 1, then nothing planned technical canyon-wise until FreezeFest. Kind of not worth getting right now for me. On the other hand, buying gear = good...
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04-29-2010, 09:38 PM #11
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04-29-2010, 09:55 PM #12
Don't use it in places where it might get stuck. Seriously, it is wonderful in more-open places, less wonderful in constricted places where slotting in a chockstone might be a better idea.
You certainly CAN loop the rope through the rapid link or biner on the tie-in points, but it is rarely necessary.
Tom
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04-30-2010, 06:52 AM #13
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04-30-2010, 07:06 AM #14
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04-30-2010, 10:18 AM #15
Wyodave brought up a good point (on the yahoo group) about rope grooves using this contraption. Something to think about.
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04-30-2010, 10:44 AM #16
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04-30-2010, 11:01 AM #17
How about a "Water Trap"?
We played around with a Water Trap made from a dry bag about 10 years ago. The idea worked and had a lot of potential, but everyone playing with it kinda lost interest after awhile and moved along to other projects.
We tried a couple different methods. First method was obvious... Pull the rip chord and the water drains out of your anchor allowing you to retrieve the Water Trap.... but... the method we had a lot of success with and was the most fun to play with was actually a small hole in the bottom of the Water Trap. The hole was like a fuse.... you had so many minutes to complete your rappel because when the water drained everything was coming down.
Anyhoo.... food for thought....
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04-30-2010, 11:41 AM #18
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04-30-2010, 12:34 PM #19
Or to, ahem, leave a well-located permanent fixed anchor...
Great looking device. I'm usually all about beeyotchin' with regard to the fragile pothole ecology being disrupted by the digging efforts of the rock and debris burying herds, but, surface sand looks like really minimal disturbance. Given the large amount of sand in some of the potholes, perfect.
As far as rope groovin' goes, popular canyons are goin' to get 'em with any anchor that sets back from an edge. Wonder if a wider, flat strap, or, maybe extend a tarp or sheet past the edge might help? Cord seems worse for groovin'. Wide flat webbing might be better.
If there were a way to empty it without pulling hard? Like releasing a trap door? Dunno. Does make me want to think about it though.
Anyhoo, pretty cool lookin' rig.
Edit to add...just got a thought... If you built the trap so the middle was pinched way way down, and the sand stayed in it due to the geometry of the ends, when loaded with a person's weight, then when the rappeller was off, the tarp/trap would sag back naturally, and dump the load... Maybe? That might reduce rope grooves some because you wouldn't have to pull hard on the middle of the bag, just release the load on the ends, and the sand would pour out.
Hmmmm....
-Brian in SLC
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05-03-2010, 09:19 PM #20
Just got back from three days on Powell using the sand trap almost exclusively. It is an amazing tool. We did blow out the pull cord on our last pull, but Steve W had a pretty good theory. This particular specimen had webbing as its pull, where Steve's original used rope. The webbing sitting under all that sand created too much friction due to larger surface area being weighted. The roped version never had any trouble. Tom, I want one but I want the old style with the rope pull. Unless you think that theory is nonsense...
"I approach nature with a certain surly ill-will, daring Her to make trouble"
-Edward Abbey
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