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I strongly believe that Dan did miscalculate on his last jump. For some reason he moved his jump site. In doing so he crossed the ropes (either on the retrieval line or on the main jump line). When he jumped the first knot above the one he was tied in with slid down a section of rope several lengths up. The sheath was heavily melted and removed in several sections on this upper part of the rope. The knot that slid down the rope was melted in multiple locations and was melted nearly completely through, deep inside the knot. This knot was not tight, yet others in the system were (this is the one open question that is unresolved as far as I know). It is my conclusion that Dan's rope was cut by his own rope sliding against itself. Use of a magnifying glass indicated to me that the cut surface was due to sliding action in one direction. There was no evidence of hot cutting with a knife or other type of instrument. I conducted further experiments in my lab to see if tensile overload could have caused this failure. The samples I tested were significantly different in that they were heavily frayed and tattered. My analysis of Dan's ropes in general was that they were in great condition. There was no evidence to me of damage due to previous falls, uv exposure, or weather. I would have climbed on these ropes without any hesitation had they not been from this accident. I do not believe that the condition of the ropes had anything at all to do with the failure of the ropes. Nor do I believe that Dan's basic shock absorbing setup was incorrect. Crossing the ropes was the problem. http://www.rockclimbing.com/cgi-bin/forum/gforum.cgi?t=41237&start=0&postdays=0&postorder=asc&highlight= |
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