Engineering:Quickdraw

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Short description: Piece of climbing equipment used by rock and ice climbers
Two quickdraws. The upper has a solid bent gate for the rope and the lower a wire gate for it.
Zwischensicherung.jpg

A quickdraw (also known as an extender) is a piece of climbing equipment used by rock and ice climbers to allow the climbing rope to run freely through protection such as bolt anchors or other traditional gear while leading.

A quickdraw consists of two carabiners connected by a semi-rigid material (sometimes called the "dogbone").[1] One carabiner has a straight gate and connects to an anchoring device. The other carabiner is for the climbing rope, and uses a bent gate.[2] Quickdraws are manufactured with either a solid carabiner gate or a wire carabiner gate for its lighter weight.

Use

A quickdraw is a specific type of runner. Runners are used by rock and ice climbers to extend the distance between an anchoring device and the rope.

A quickdraw is differentiated from a simple open loop of webbing with 2 carabiners on it by the following attributes:

  1. The material that connects the 2 carabiners is semi-rigid. It is not as flexible as an open loop of webbing. This rigidity facilitates quicker clipping to an anchoring device.
  2. The gate (on the carabiner that clips to a rope) is held in a specific orientation that facilitates quicker clipping to a rope.

These two attributes differentiate a quickdraw from other types of runners. These two attributes are what makes this special type of runner "quick" to "draw". If either of these two elements is missing the runner is not a "quickdraw".

The methods by which a quickdraw maintains gate orientation vary. The most popular method involves the use of an elastic polymer band around the outside of the point of connection between the carabiner and the semi-rigid material. The elastic band should only be installed on the rope-end, and not on the anchor end.[3][4] The elastic band is not a load-bearing element, and the carabiner must pass through the dogbone to hold body weight. Incorrect assembly has led to at least one death.[1]

While historically the orientation of the gates varied, it is now generally recommended that both gates face the same direction, and that the quickdraw is clipped with both gates facing away from the climber's path. This lessens the chances of the carabiner getting "nose-hooked" and breaking, or of either carabiner unclipping, during a fall or due to rope drag.[5][3][6][4][7]

Permadraw

A permadraw is a quickdraw that is made from steel cable that has steel carabiners and remains permanently attached to the bolts. Developed in places such as Rifle Mountain Park in Colorado as a safer alternative; steel is much harder-wearing than the aluminum used in normal quickdraws. In addition, unlike quickdraws, climbers don't need to retrieve the permadraws at the end of a climb.[8]

Alpine draw

Alpine quick draws feature long slings wrapped or folded multiple times to save space on a climbers harness in place of a dogbone. Alpine draws are often used to extend pieces of protection and reduce rope drag but may also be attached to the harness simply as a convienient way to store slings for other purposes, such as building an anchor or use in natural protection.[9] The softer sling of an alpine draw may be considered superior to the stiffer dogbone of most quick draws as it causes less perturbation of traditional protection and may reduce the chance of the rope unclipping itself from the carabiner. [10]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Prevent Quickdraw Failure" (in en-us). Climbing Magazine. https://www.climbing.com/skills/prevent-quickdraw-failure/. 
  2. Hattingh, Garth (July 1998). The Climber's Handbook (1 ed.). Stackpole Books. ISBN 0-8117-2706-8. https://archive.org/details/climbershandbook00hatt. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Positioning the quickdraw and clipping the rope" (in en-us). https://www.petzl.com/US/en/Sport/Positioning-the-quickdraw-and-clipping-the-rope. "The carabiner gate must always face away from the climber's direction of travel. ... The anchor-end carabiner must be mobile (no STRING). The rope-end carabiner must be fixed (with STRING)." 
  4. 4.0 4.1 Van Leuven, Chris (2014-06-27). "Face Those Gates". http://www.spadout.com/a/face-those-gates/. "safer to keep the gates facing the same way ... it’s safest to keep the bottom carabiner fixed to the QD’s webbing with tape or a rubber O-ring, but not the top biner" 
  5. "Metolius carabiners manual". https://www.metoliusclimbing.com/pdf/carabiner_manual.pdf. "In most situations ... the gates of both carabiners should face away from the direction of travel of the climber." 
  6. Heise-Flecken, Detlef; Flecken, Gabi (28 March 2016). Rock climbing : technique, equipment, safety, with an introduction to indoor climbing. Aachen, Germany. pp. 119. ISBN 9781782550358. OCLC 903189054. "The principle is that the gates must always be pointing in the opposite direction to the climbing route" 
  7. Michaël Andries (2013-07-11), "Why both snappers should point to the same side, away from climbing direction.", YouTube, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e7DLIJTkRdI, retrieved 2018-08-14 [|permanent dead YouTube link|dead YouTube link}}]
  8. Bisharat, Andrew (16 September 2014). "Blue Steel: A Permadraw Solution". https://eveningsends.com/blue-steel-permadraw-solution/. Retrieved 10 March 2023. 
  9. Macdonald, Dougald. "Essential Skills: The Alpine Quickdraw". Outside. https://www.climbing.com/skills/the-alpine-quickdraw/. 
  10. "Unclipping (and cams failing)". Thrutch (Sydney Rockclimbing Club) (September 2023). 

External links