So lets talk about it...

Accident report is found at www.mountainproject.com/forum...

Пікірлер: 275

  • @daryaalvarez5592
    @daryaalvarez559210 ай бұрын

    I was a little nervous when my friend told me about this video, but I am glad to see you handle it with such respect. Danny was a good friend of mine and somewhat of a mentor to me in climbing. I worked with him for 2 years and he taught me a ton of things about climbing. When we were told of the accident, many of us were shocked and baffled. Danny was meticulous and overly cautious when it came to climbing. Him getting in to an accident of all people was so confusing, he was so thorough and so knowledgeable. I appreciate you breaking this down and tackling it with precision and gentile. Danny was always trying to learn more and grow in his climbing and I am honored to have been along for the ride. Thank you. Im glad his legacy and memory can be carried on, not just by those who knew him, but by other lovers of climbing as well.

  • @brendans8141

    @brendans8141

    8 ай бұрын

    Sorry for your loss

  • @BlindGuardian050

    @BlindGuardian050

    6 ай бұрын

    Way to make it all about you for attention

  • @mikedickinson9730

    @mikedickinson9730

    5 ай бұрын

    @@BlindGuardian050 Not sure how you would say that…But, there always that guy and you were him today! Peace bro!

  • @ariannah6023

    @ariannah6023

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@BlindGuardian050if your family member dies, are you gonna act like you hardly know them? All he said about "himself" was that Danny was a friend of his and taught him some things.

  • @JorgTheElder

    @JorgTheElder

    2 ай бұрын

    @@BlindGuardian050 way to be a terrible human. They did not make anything about "them." They shared their appreciation that the topic was covered is a thoughtful manner.

  • @haidenshober6732
    @haidenshober673210 ай бұрын

    Danny was a great guy and great climber, thank you for treating this video with respect.

  • @dannyisrael

    @dannyisrael

    10 ай бұрын

    😞

  • @charlieg4113
    @charlieg411310 ай бұрын

    I really appreciate you taking the time to fully humanize this as more than just a “what happened/could’ve happened” discussion and pay full attention to the life that was lost ❤

  • @scottnon9779
    @scottnon977910 ай бұрын

    One person in the mountain project thread made a really good point that in a normal slab fall, the climber's body on the rock prevents the rope from completely pinching down on the carabiner, whereas in a situation where there is a slab above an overhang, the falling climber can actually fall below the angle of the slab, resulting in a true pinch of the rope at the carabiner. It would be interesting to see if you could replicate those two situations in a more controlled setting. The fact that the belayer felt no tension does seem to indicate that the carabiner compressed the rope. Deep condolences to everyone involved.

  • @bricenoh

    @bricenoh

    9 ай бұрын

    Under this scenario, I wonder if leaving ANOTHER carabiner attached to the carabiner attached to the rope would reduce the chances of pinching (at the expense of making rattling noises while climbing). or add a thick rubber ring to the rope.

  • @seanmcgarvey6274
    @seanmcgarvey627410 ай бұрын

    I was there and was very involved in the post accident events which left me very shaken up. It’s surreal to me to now see this accident being covered by a channel as big and influential as How Not 2.

  • @scottnon9779

    @scottnon9779

    10 ай бұрын

    I'm sorry that you were involved in the accident. As someone who's lost friends who were climbing, I hope you're able to parse through things. Therapy definitely helps :)

  • @fastandfun20043

    @fastandfun20043

    10 ай бұрын

    Can you get him the rope and gear?

  • @lizardkeeper100

    @lizardkeeper100

    10 ай бұрын

    how are you holding up after the accident?

  • @Noughtta

    @Noughtta

    10 ай бұрын

    Please consider some counseling or talking to loved ones, you can have long lasting PTSD from being around events like this.

  • @mortalitydoesstuff8965

    @mortalitydoesstuff8965

    10 ай бұрын

    It's absolutely awful to be witness to something like that, I'm sorry you had to go through that. Do everything you can to heal and help those around you heal as well, you're all going to need it. Be there for each other. If possible, it would be a huge contribution to the climbing community to send in the used gear for testing, and it might help bring you some peace as well.

  • @lizardkeeper100
    @lizardkeeper10010 ай бұрын

    This is tragic RIP Danny. I think this was a freak accident and I hope the belayer is able to handle the mental anguish this is causing.

  • @jeffreyprusch656
    @jeffreyprusch65610 ай бұрын

    Thank you for making this video and giving an understanding for those of us that are still looking for answers into why Danny's rope snapped. I was a close friend of Danny's for a number of years and the news about his accident was unbelievable when it reached me. Danny and I started climbing together years ago and eventually found ourselves working together at a local climbing gym. He was the biggest nerd when it came to knots, gear, and how to use it properly and we always relied on him when it came to checking our gear and whatnot before a climb. I've seen all the talk about his accident on MP with many people speculating about him making a mistake and it's upsetting to think that this could have been a result of him making a mistake. You describing this as being a factor of many small things culminating to a freak accident is very reassuring to me so I appreciate you taking the time to address this. Danny loved the climbing community dearly and was loved by many in our local community for helping foster a love for climbing in central Pennsylvania

  • @thatwolfyouknow8598
    @thatwolfyouknow859810 ай бұрын

    Graceful handle of a tricky ask. Thanks for taking the time. I lost a rope to this exact scenario and I was fortunate to have that be the only cost of such an important lesson. I had loaned my rope to a couple buddies and one of them fell of a quickdraw that was situated such that the bottom carabiner rested on a rock edge. The climber took a fall and it wasn't even that big. He maybe fell five feet, if that, and he was only like fifteen feet off the ground and the rope was immediately core shot. The belayer was able to lower him quickly and nobody was hurt, but we were all amazed at how small the fall was, and how big the consequence, simply due to the carabiner laying on the rock and pinching the rope between itself and the rock during the fall. My heart goes out to everyone feeling the sting of this loss and I am eternally grateful that I got to see, firsthand, the importance of extending draws over rock lips without paying more than a rope for the lesson. Thanks again for the video

  • @erinjustice7729
    @erinjustice772910 ай бұрын

    Thank you for taking the time to treat this accident with such respect. Reading some of the theories and speculation on that thread, it felt like it got to a point where the argument mattered more than the loss. It got hard to read. In the end, like you said, freak accident and there is no way to ever know every detail. Danny was one of my son's first climbing coaches and the first person he trusted to bring him down from the top of the wall. My husband worked with him at the gym and we all were so fond of him. This was such a hard loss for so many people. His smile was contagious and I still see it everytime I walk in the gym.

  • @EverettWilson
    @EverettWilson10 ай бұрын

    Ryan, I lost a friend to climbing and got to see an asshole on Mountain Project shit talk them in their "accident analysis". I want to thank you for being kind in how you approached this. It shows.

  • @michaelwolfe9807
    @michaelwolfe980710 ай бұрын

    Experimental physicist here. The crux to this experiment is to recreate the rope overlap that caused the pinching during a whip. As you said, things move around. A little bit of double-sided scotch tape to keep things in place during a drop test. The extra adhesion is negligible compared to the fall forces in the drop test. So here's how I'd set up a drop test experiment: Drop test a mass M (climber) a distance L (total rope length during the accident) above a fixed point (belay) with a point of protection between the climber and belay. M, L, and the location of the protection should be selected to best match the accident report. Attach two dynamometers: one at the belay and one at the protection point. The protection point should be a carabiner taped to a slab-like rock, positioned in a way that ensures the fall line of the mass M results in the rope overlapping during the whip, recreating this necessary pinching effect. This is not an easy task as the fall line has variance. Wind shields help if this is outside. Also magnetic release systems promote consistent dropping. Here's the key to a successful experiment: the dyna on the belayer should read ~ 0 kN if you successfully recreated the pinching effect, as noted in the accident report. If this doesn't break the rope, add some burrs or sharpness to the carabiner (although, not sure if that actually played a role here).

  • @derekcraig3617

    @derekcraig3617

    10 ай бұрын

    what about actually going to the accident site and reproducing the scenario that played out with a bag drop test?

  • @michaelwolfe9807

    @michaelwolfe9807

    10 ай бұрын

    @@derekcraig3617 Harder to control variables at the accident site compared to in a lab. It could be very nuanced the details you need to get right to recreate the failure mode. Plus, a lab setting allows you to more easily vary things like slab angle at the point of protection.

  • @derekcraig3617

    @derekcraig3617

    10 ай бұрын

    @@michaelwolfe9807 one thing you cannot recreate in the lab very easily at all is rock texture

  • @harlanstockman5703
    @harlanstockman570310 ай бұрын

    First, very thoughtfully done, kudos. Second, I go for the pinching theory with an effective very high fall factor. I do lots of silly abrasion tests, where I pull kernmantle rope back and forth over a very coarse, nasty wood file. My experience is that the sheath is very quickly breached, and then the core strands keep sliding back and forth with little erosion, even for ten times as many pulls. Essentially the sheath is woven so that the sharp points on the file stick in between strands at 45 degrees and pop them, whereas the almost parallel core strands quickly find places between the sharp points. So the rope still has at least 65% of its strength, even though it looks horrible, with frayed sheath everywhere. Drop test sounds cool, but you can probably get a feeling from a slow pull test; namely find the conditions where the rope will pinch through a biner. Put a steel plate at an angle on one end of you pull setup, attach the biner to a "bolt" on the inclined plate, yada yada, find the conditions where it pinches. Attaching the plate to the bench will be interesting, but really you need just 2 attachment points at one pull end of a metal triangular prism. Did he have a unicore rope? Edit: seems like there is a new analysis at MP? May come diwn to calculating the force of an F2 fall with a dynamic rope

  • @drew5334
    @drew533410 ай бұрын

    If you could recreate the basic situation, where the belay strand passing through a carabiner gets pinched against the rock by the leader strand, it would be interesting to see what the forces look like and if the rope breaks significantly lower in that situation. You could make a rig where you're able to place anchor a paver at different angles and then have a fall occur over the edge, and I could see trying it with smooth pavers versus a rough edge (maybe pour your own concrete paver for this to get the texture as you want it) to see how the roughness of the rock might affect things.

  • @Beakerbite

    @Beakerbite

    10 ай бұрын

    I see two different tests. The likelihood or force of the pinch on a sloped surface is one. Then the risk of a burr tearing the rope as another. Yes both of these events may have happened together but trying to combine it all is going to be harder and it won't say what the more dangerous situation is. Obviously people should avoid both but shit happens and you have to make due sometimes, so knowledge is important.

  • @aoymfpv4238

    @aoymfpv4238

    10 ай бұрын

    I would really love to see this test @HowNOT2 . If the danger factor is that high for a rope to be pinched and create a fall factor >1 at pitch >1 I think it would be a fundamentally important lesson for any climber doing more than leading/toproping a single pitch.

  • @alexlevin6020

    @alexlevin6020

    10 ай бұрын

    Yeah I'd be curious to see this too. It's not something I've really thought about before - especially somehow pinching the rope on a slabby section and falling over a lip where you have that very specific circumstance creating a lot of force all at once.

  • @mikeiver
    @mikeiver10 ай бұрын

    Sounds like a bunch of things came together into one single tragic result. As a kid we used to free climb with nothing but nylon ski rope as a backup on sand stone faced mountain. We were lucky. I learned a lot later just how dangerous we were. Now days I always consider SGPR (Situation Gear Placement Ramifications). Be it a climb, fall protection, a lift, or even securing loads, there is always enough time. Proper gear is cheap, severe injury or death, not so much! Ryan and crews videos have taught me so much about rigging and safety and made me both safer and more analytical about what I do and how I do it. Gear I once deemed more than sufficient is now bare minimum is now relegated to tent tie downs or securing a tarp or pipes to a rack. This tragedy is yet another example of a smart person missing just one small detail, or perhaps many small details, in haste and paying the ultimate price for the oversight. So sad for the guys family. Dissemination of these things makes everyone safer but, fuck, there are better ways for us all to learn! Be safe and ever vilegent people.

  • @patrickvolk7031
    @patrickvolk70319 ай бұрын

    Seneca is Tuscarora Sandstone, sand cemented into quartzite. It does chew up ropes. The exposed sections can get jagged, and you have to watch the flakes. Something to consider, it's not unusual (at least when I was climbing there) to bring a piece of carpet or a part of a welcome mat to put down on the rock when you rapelled. Might be something to consider to mitigate that in the future, especially if you take one anyway. Clip it into the biner, may not work if the rope angles from it. RIP Danny. I hate to hear Seneca Rocks take lives.

  • @lydiagattens7426

    @lydiagattens7426

    7 ай бұрын

    where is seneca rocks?

  • @patrickvolk7031

    @patrickvolk7031

    7 ай бұрын

    @@lydiagattens7426 West Virginia

  • @ericcox6764

    @ericcox6764

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@lydiagattens7426 it's in West Virginia

  • @vedantgdesai
    @vedantgdesai10 ай бұрын

    RIP Danny. We have a memorial for Danny at Seneca, he has a place in so many of our hearts for the rest of our lives. Please feel free to reach out to visit if you wish to reflect on Danny and his life ❤

  • @septicwhelk3654
    @septicwhelk365410 ай бұрын

    I am not a climber I did not know the chap . This video was extraordinarily moving and very well done , outstanding young man . RESPECT !

  • @matiascamprubi-soms7719
    @matiascamprubi-soms771910 ай бұрын

    Man, that’s sobering. I was on a dead stem of a walnut tree that same day, and had nowhere to tie in at the top. I only had a few cuts to make, and I was tied in twice, but both ropes were tied way below my waist, almost down by my feet. On static ropes, I know that a fall, even just the 5-6’ I could’ve fallen there would fuck me up pretty badly. I think about it a lot when I find a flat open topped tree. Hard not to let things like this shake you too hard.

  • @LarsLarsen77

    @LarsLarsen77

    10 ай бұрын

    You sir, need a crane.

  • @peoples126
    @peoples12610 ай бұрын

    Such a terrible loss, same age, definitely a splash of cold humble water to the face with this one. Stay safe people, rest in peace to a brother, a son, a friend, a fellow human being

  • @soberholic
    @soberholic10 ай бұрын

    15:24 that summation is perfect 👌🏻 sad to loose someone in a freak accident like this, much love to family and friends of this poor guy

  • @niske

    @niske

    10 ай бұрын

    Yeah sometimes I am overly scared when climbing since I know about so much that can go wrong. Or just having seen so many ropes break here. But while it is definitly nice to know a lot about limits of gear now I for myself should just acknowledge how much it takes for new rated stuff to fail when used correctly and have fun with it.

  • @Johnny_Cash_Flow
    @Johnny_Cash_Flow10 ай бұрын

    I don't know this guy, but he grew up near where I lived. He probably climbed at Reading Rocks, the first place I ever climbed back in 2001. Condolences to his friends and family.

  • @RiskyVentureMinerals
    @RiskyVentureMinerals10 ай бұрын

    Always a treat to see Bobby on your episodes, great info, I’m very sorry for the loss of this great human.

  • @nathanbutcher1
    @nathanbutcher110 ай бұрын

    I can definitely see the pain and the sadness in you over this event. A very sad story. As you said the sad thing is everything could have been perfect, perfect conditions, perfect set up, perfect gear, perfect technique but as with anything in life sometimes that 1 in a million failure happens and it can cost someone’s life. Very unfortunate and condolences to everyone involved and the climbers friends and family.

  • @DanQuoLives
    @DanQuoLives10 ай бұрын

    Thanks for making this video, very well done and with compassion. I worked for many years as an accident reconstruction expert and it needs to be reinforced that weird stuff happens and very often we will never know for certain what happened. I have worked on legal cases where all the experts had figured out what most likely happened only to be demonstrated to be wrong when a video or other evidence turned up. Dan Merrick (DAMMERR)

  • @adamgrant303
    @adamgrant30310 ай бұрын

    I have had ropes twist creating a loop. When the loop hit a carabiner it was the same as tying a stop knot. Usually happens if you use a rope for short projects then jump on a long multi pitch tying into both ends of the rope at the ground traps the twist. I messed up uncoiling a new rope once and that rope would twist up on everything for about a month.

  • @cjvanhine
    @cjvanhine10 ай бұрын

    For the test - how about beginning by isolating the pinch factor? Ex. Bolt a biner to a peice of metal to pinch the rope and do a few body drops at varying lengths on that. If that doesnt break the rope, start adding in some contibuting factors until you find minimum number that would recreate a failure. For example, if the pinch alone isnt enough, then add in factors like substituting the metal for rock, adding small vertical cuts, recreating the angle, adding a bur , etc.

  • @climbskirepeat
    @climbskirepeat10 ай бұрын

    How about dropping on a garda hitch to better test the burr/pinching theory? If the belayer never felt the load, the force must have stopped at the top carabiner, since there was no mention of a stuck rope.

  • @Jimmy___
    @Jimmy___10 ай бұрын

    Good respectful and thoughtful discussion. I feel two ways about this, on the one hand there are a zillion freak combinations that can happen that cause gear to fail. Enough people climb enough and you are going to have black swan events. You can't possibly test everything. On the other hand, I think climbing's empirical and anti-fragile approach is really important, and we owe it to Danny to find out what happened. In order to properly investigate, it may be necessary to get a look at the actual gear and the exact location, which may not be possible. But I think it is worth trying to find out if this was likely a gear issue like a carabiner with a burr, or if there is some potential issue like the pinching you talked about which on its own can present a major risk that people maybe aren't fully considering.

  • @skymanchronicles8936
    @skymanchronicles893610 ай бұрын

    I’m not a climber but I have 35 years in industrial rope access. Our knot locations are always changing on the rope based on height of work, rarely do you put stress on the same places on the rope. Climbers always use the end so all the stress is almost always in the same areas over and over based on how many climbs and how many whippers(falls). So either end of the rope could be full of unseen internal stresses caused by many uses. In short the pinch areas might have occurred many times in relatively same area. One to many, could cause a snap where the inner cords have been damaged and didn’t hold after the cover was pinched then failed. Just trying to wrap my head how it could have possibly happened. But not real sure. Sadly there are risks and knowing the conditions of rope are paramount.

  • @IweinFuld
    @IweinFuld10 ай бұрын

    Accidents like this are freaky, but it is still respectful to try to figure them out and think about preventing them in the future. I have a theory you might find useful for an experiment: during the fall, the rope falls too. If it falls into a feature that pinches it close to the climber (not on the carabiner or before like you seemed to hint at), all bets are off… you can easily go over 2x. I accidentally managed this at a fortunately very low speed once. It was memorable. Doing that at more than 10m/s would be… not something I'd try.

  • @Sillyworld82
    @Sillyworld8210 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing this story respectfully. We need to have these conversations to learn and keep ourselves and each other safe doing this type of activity. ❤

  • @dada236
    @dada23610 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for taking the time to explain fall factors!

  • @LoveAndClimbing
    @LoveAndClimbing10 ай бұрын

    Sorry to Danny's family for their loss. Our sport is not without it's risk and while I can't speak for Danny, for myself, I go out knowing those risks because climbing brings me enough joy to make my life worth living. I hope Danny got to experience that. The description of the "gunshot" sound makes me think of a similar incident which happened to a friend of mine where the rope was damaged by battery acid. I wonder if there has been any look at the rope ends? I imagine with the emergency response that wasn't a priority. Maybe I'm just unaware of it, but I don't think there has been a HowNot2 test of how battery acid (or other chemicals) affect rope?

  • @mane645

    @mane645

    10 ай бұрын

    Chlorine, sun exposure might affect too

  • @francismartinevans
    @francismartinevans10 ай бұрын

    A pretty simply way to simulate a fall factor > 2 , is connect a weight to a chain/cable, then connect the chain/cable to a length of rope which is attached to an anchor. 3/8" grade 80 chain should be strong enough

  • @ncrshane1919

    @ncrshane1919

    10 ай бұрын

    Yep, if you attach 5ft of chain to your weight on one end and to 5ft of rope on the other, then drop it from 5ft above the anchor you would get a fall factor of 3 since the weight can fall 15ft with only 5ft of dynamic rope in the system. Using chain will also let you dial in the exact FF you want by attaching the weight to a different link closer or farther from where the rope is connected to the chain.

  • @ryanp0342

    @ryanp0342

    10 ай бұрын

    Just a friendly reminder to be very careful when tensioning chain and cable. It has a lot more kinetic energy than rope.

  • @siav0sh

    @siav0sh

    10 ай бұрын

    A similar way that doesn't involve joining a chain/cable with a rope and should be doable with material you probably have: Attach the rope to a ring/biner but instead of attaching the ring/biner to a bolt let it slide down a length of metal rod that is attached to a strong point at the bottom. If your rope length is X feet and the length of your metal rode is Y feet your weight drops 2X + Y feet before the rope catches and you get a factor 2 + Y / X fall.

  • @bobcostas9716

    @bobcostas9716

    10 ай бұрын

    Cable is the worst. At least when chain breaks you only have to look out for a single link worth of shrapnel. Line dampers are cheap insurance for cable though.@@ryanp0342

  • @smeraldoderosa7556
    @smeraldoderosa755610 ай бұрын

    My sincere condolences to the family and friends of the young man. I have five sons and can't even think of what it would be like... My thoughts and prayers go out to them. But I believe your analyzing and trying to explain what could happen is extremely important and necessary.

  • @drbrown745
    @drbrown7459 ай бұрын

    First. Thanks for treating this matter with respect. Second. It's important for climbing community to learn from this accident - because there are no freak accidents. Importantly, from the available information, this was an accident scenario that was pretty ordinary - an experienced climber and belayer working on a known route using reasonable safety precautions - not elites simuling and placing little protection for the objective of a speed record, not uniformed beginners that tied with single overhand knot and belayed without the use of a device or hip belay (both of these scenarios are from actual accidents). Point is - any of us could encounter this failure so it's worth examining for everyone's benefit, and I think that does the Danny and his loved ones a service. Said that, I've modeled how I believe this accident occurred (based on the currently available info) and I think there are four variables to examine: (1) the position of the roof and the slab relative to the extension of the carabiner and its ability to pinch the rope as the extended protection moves against the rock as the climber moves; (2) the effect of a burr or other wear point on the specific model of carabiner used - alpine carabiners tend to have a design that hollows out the structure of the biner to save weight, creating ridges in the biner by design (3) the effect of the rocks texture on the rope in a pinch scenario and (4) the effect of fall factor. My hunch is that several of these variables aligned to create this tragic ciircmstance. But I also suspect one or more of these variables played a disproportionate role in the accident. Lastly, I think it would be useful to test whether or not this accident could have been prevented with the use of twin ropes (or double ropes if the route allowed it) vs a single rope. It's worth studying not so much because this was a freak accident, but because it sure looks like this was how most of climb every day, a seemingly innocuous but dangerous flaw in the system can be identified that can save lives in the future. Thanks for all the rigor and care.

  • @McEspada
    @McEspada10 ай бұрын

    Condolences to Dany's family and friends and to the belayer..... man such a horrible thing to happen to someone who maybe is your best friend just... hope everyone finds a way to deal with this tragic loss and lots of strength. Thank you for going into this it's very interesting how to avoid these situations. For the test: Do a pull test where you bolt it into your in-office pull table. Hard to explain but I will try Build a steel H frame with a steel plate and a loop on the other side of the pulling force On top of the steel plate, you bolt a round piece of rock(sloper) If it does not make sense send me a message or answer here and I can draw something up in autocad

  • @TheRedWon
    @TheRedWon10 ай бұрын

    Great job with approaching this, Ryan. Very respectfully done.

  • @oliverschutz7822
    @oliverschutz782210 ай бұрын

    Hi Ryan, You can simulate a factor two fall with a CAMP Goblin. Rope can pulled back very quickly through it. This can be accomplished with bugie rope parallel below the Goblin. Condolence to all the families.

  • @Dani-ln6sp
    @Dani-ln6sp10 ай бұрын

    Such respect for the channel and the way you handled this. You clearly feel for human life and have the best interests of people in mind. Always nice to see

  • @alistairbuckle3450
    @alistairbuckle345010 ай бұрын

    If you wanted to test pinching ropes maybe a scaffolding Jordan Safety Clamp (temporary anchor point for scaffolders) would let you apply such forces. They are designed to arrest falls (up to 22kN depending on application) and already have a large eye you could use. The idea is the clamp is suspended by the eye and in the jaws instead of the normal scaffold tube is a smaller diameter length of solid round stock, the rope, then carabiner. Could use a low range torque wrench when tightening the nut to measure how tight the rope is being clamped / pinched. Possibly clamp a small rock in there to simulate gear not being extended. As always, thanks for raising awareness of these issues and explaining it so it's understandable.

  • @mountainmandoug
    @mountainmandoug10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for a very humane discussion of the relevant technical details. My first thought is that with the information available, there isn't a way to reproduce the accident. I could see playing with a "rope grinder" of a carabiner pinching the rope onto a piece of rock in the slow-pull machine to see what happens, but I hare a hard time seeing drop tests working with such a thing. I think the other issue that should be considered is the possibility that the rope had been exposed to a strong acid. There was an accident some years ago where a climbing rope broke in a gymn and forensic analysis found it had been exposed to battery acid.

  • @mikevansickle2735
    @mikevansickle273510 ай бұрын

    Heavy vid on a heavy topic. Thanks for keeping it real and still investigating so we can learn and grow. Much love to Danny's family and friends.

  • @wyominghistorychannel1361
    @wyominghistorychannel136110 ай бұрын

    Excellent analysis. Sorry for the loss of Danny.

  • @samyonboard
    @samyonboard10 ай бұрын

    Thanks for your effort to shine light on this... Maybe use a Garda brake as a pinch?

  • @murrayty
    @murrayty10 ай бұрын

    After watching your video and reading the forum thread I came up with a theory that the failure was a combination of pinched rope and abrasion and just posted that theory in the thread (Tyler Murray's post). As mentioned in that post it would be interesting to see test effects of pinching a rope (both pull test and drop test) and abrasion drop tests (drop over smooth curved surface, rough curved surfaces with either increasing roughness or reduced radius, blunt/sharp edges etc). The first test (pinched rope) would just be interesting to see if/how much it affects rope strength. The second one would show the importance of gear placement to avoid falls on edges. I believe you have already done some fall factor videos but a drop test video on that and trying to recreate effects of belayer pulling in line while a climber falls would be interesting. This could be done easier than you theorized because you don't have to test to failure so can use lighter weights and some type of capture device (even toothed) while trying to pull in (some way to know how much rope was pulled in will be the hard part, maybe colour coded rope or something and high speed video). All you need to do is measure the forces and see if you can recreate a greater than factor 2 fall. The high speed camera idea also gave me idea that it would be neat to see high speed video of a rope failure, not sure if that has been done.

  • @perplexedon9834
    @perplexedon983410 ай бұрын

    Thank you for humanizing this accident. I think regarding gear fear, everyone needs to remember that almost all climbing risk is mitigable. This is the rare case where it seems most everything was done right. The vast majority of deaths are from rappel accidents that could be fixed by weight testing, using a prussik/assisted brake device and tying stoppers. If you are really concerned about something like this, it sounds like climbing on twin ropes could prevent rare rope snap accidents like this. Like you said, freak accident. I view something like this like getting struck by lightning or having a heart attack. Driving to the crag is significantly more dangerous.

  • @luv2sharpen
    @luv2sharpen10 ай бұрын

    Well done. Good treatment of the situation. I agree that securing a piece of concrete to the drop tower as a replicate edge might be effective for recreating this scenario. I would start with a pier block as they are substantial and come with a pre-drilled hole for anchors if to the tower with a big bolt. Or maybe just clamp a paver to the top side of an I beam with a few squeeze clamps.

  • @mifly1977
    @mifly197710 ай бұрын

    It might not recreate the scenario exactly in regards to the pinched on a rock, but perhaps for the nicked carabiner and the pinch working in tandem to create this failure, you could use a Garda hitch (alpine clutch) with the top binder having the notch in it. Thanks as always for the insight and open dialogue.

  • @123amsterdan456
    @123amsterdan45610 ай бұрын

    I feel like Twin/Double ropes is going to be the way.. Why no redundancy is such a critical piece of equipment :(

  • @mattreeves6338
    @mattreeves633810 ай бұрын

    I liked that video a lot. I think it is really good to discuss this kind of stuff. I very much appreciate the fact that you never say this is what happened. Because we just don't know. But it is nice to discuss what could have happened.

  • @rachelhasbruises
    @rachelhasbruises10 ай бұрын

    The fact that the belayer never felt the fall seems to be the single most important detail of situation. :( Horrible, nonetheless.

  • @niske
    @niske10 ай бұрын

    When you mentioned that it was pinched like a gri gri I had a setup in mind where you have two dummies/weights attached together by the rope: one is falling from some distance above a "quickdraw" and one simultaniosly starts falling from right under the quickdraw. That way it would create a factor >2 fall. To make that pinching action there could be a pinching locking device right under the qd or instead of a qd there is a gri gri directly. Alternatively the device under the qd could be one where the rope goes through in a straight way, like with a taz. Or you just have a normal factor 2 fall with a sling attached to a short dynamic rope attached to an anchor, thus technically having a factor >2 fall, ideally creating exactly the factor that can happend by taking a lot of rope and having the rope pinched.

  • @E_Clampus_Vitus
    @E_Clampus_Vitus10 ай бұрын

    RIP Danny. I wish your family and friends peace in their lives.

  • @9711will
    @9711will10 ай бұрын

    My condolences to the family and friends, it must be hard. Sounds like a combination if small things that most of the time would have no effect interacting in an unforeseen way.

  • @ariotahasoni12
    @ariotahasoni1210 ай бұрын

    Quick comment: For some ropes, the rope fall ratting number is only on fall factor 1s and not fall factor 2. Those ropes should be retired after one fall with 1.6 factor or higher. Always check the UIAA fall ratting for the rope you use and how it was tested (fall factor 1, 1.5, 1.7 or …)

  • @peguezu
    @peguezu10 ай бұрын

    Hello Ryan/Bobby, thank you for explaining the possible causes of this accident. It is always hard to learn what happened and think about what could have been done to prevent it. I can only imagine how the belayer is feeling. Thinking of your question on how to try to recreate this accident: What if you were to have a grigri at the bottom of the drop tower, have the brake rope go to a pulley above with a load. Then, dropping both loads (the belayer and brake rope) simultaneously, thus reducing the slack of the climber load as it falls. Sort of a 2:1 pulley system for the brake rope. Not sure if that makes total sense. Happy and safe climbs.

  • @barongerhardt
    @barongerhardt10 ай бұрын

    Sad story, stay safe my friends. Don't stop climbing over the rocks and start living under one.

  • @user-zu7cf5zm7h
    @user-zu7cf5zm7h10 ай бұрын

    Sympathies and best wishes to family, friends, and rescuers! We all know ropes tend to break in knots. Why...bends and compression in the knot. Test the strength reduction do to compression of the rope. If the biner pinched the rope against the rock resulting in an increased FF, the biner/rock pinch point functioned similar to a knot compressing the rope. Testing the effect of compression of the rope on strength might be telling. First pass test - put a cable clamp on rope and pull test. Thanks for your thoughts on this tragedy.

  • @BenRussoUSA
    @BenRussoUSA10 ай бұрын

    Very thoughtful and heartfelt. Thanks!

  • @ottawamountainman
    @ottawamountainman10 ай бұрын

    Respectful presentation. Thank you.

  • @jacktrussler20
    @jacktrussler2010 ай бұрын

    Genuinely tragic, I hope we can learn from what happened and all be a little bit safer. May he rest in peace.

  • @natashanabein
    @natashanabein7 ай бұрын

    Loved the humanizing aspect. Thank you.

  • @mattbarry5938
    @mattbarry593810 ай бұрын

    Thanks for doing this video! I was there and it was very scary! Also I hope his family is doing as good as they possibly can after this. Also I have pictures of the cut rope if it means anything, but would rather not post them publicly

  • @EightiesTV
    @EightiesTV9 ай бұрын

    Seneca Rocks is a formation in the Tuscarora Sandstone. This stuff is quartzite and forms extremely sharp edges that will cam your rope on these sharp crystals. It's like catching a factor-2 fall on pro traxion. A virtually identical accident happened in the same location in 2010. You've gotta touch this stuff to understand how sharp these crystals are. It's almost like a rock made from broken car windows.

  • @MisterFixit69
    @MisterFixit698 ай бұрын

    Idea for design :on your droptower Or on your testbench, have a large diameter tube ( metal or something) have like griptape on there to simulate the rock, a carabiner on that surface which you can adjust up and down to recreate the angle of the "rock" , so you can recreate the pinching effect. What you also can do maybe instead of griptape (which might damage/ slide during testing) , use industrial paint with course sand dusted over it .

  • @testboga5991
    @testboga599110 ай бұрын

    My condolences to the family

  • @Davidadventures
    @Davidadventures10 ай бұрын

    It will be important to find out charactheristics of the rope. What was it's diameter? How long was it in use? How many leader falls had he taken on it previously? When I started climbing 51 years ago, ropes were 11 mm in diameter. Then it became the thing to climb with smaller diameter ropes. People are climbing with 9 mm ropes now. It's a certainty that a smaller diameter rope is more prone to break over edges than a thicker diameter rope. Then why are climbers on a march to climb with thinner ropes? Is it because a 9 mm rope weighs less on the approach? Is it because a rope manufacturer has done lab tests that show that thin ropes are fine in perfect condition and that they know that they can charge every increasing prices for less volume of material. Certainly, the cost of manufacturing a rope goes up with the diameter. Have rope companies seduced us with a lighter pack while they can charge more money for a less safe product? With the loss of a good climber and person, we are asking ourselves how did this happen? Why is it nearly impossible to find 11 mm ropes to climb with now? It's even difficult to find a 10.5 mm rope. I hope that the experimental design will include using the diamater of rope that Danny had and also recreating it with 11 mm rope to compare. It would seem that putting a climber's weight tied in as Danny did, then having the rope pass through a carabiner that is isolated by putting it on a bolt hanger on a bolt on a ramped location would be the start. The rope could be anchored just a few inches below the carabiner to a second bolt. It seems that regardless of how the rope wasn't able to elongate though the climb, that was what happened. Did it get caught in a grove as some suggested? Did it get pinched? Either way, the lower anchor below the carabiner would simulate this. I've climbed at Seneca Rocks many times. The rock, the Tuscarora Sandstone is vertically bedded and while it's called a sandstone, it's been metamorphosed in a number of mountain buildling episodes in the Appalachains. This results in many sharp edges and quartz blobs that protrude. Likely, the situation is not similar to California granite that has rounded edges. It would be important to this investigation to photograph the location of the accident and have a better understanding of the sharpness of the face where the rock came into contact with the rope. To me, it seems more likely that a sharp quartz crystal could have cut the sheath than a burr in a carabiner. One other thought. In the past, the axiom was the leader never falls. Today, people are encouraged to fall when they take their lead test at the rock gym. Climbers today are educated that taking leader falls is no problem. How would the situation have changed had the victim decided not to intentionally fall and tried to downclimb instead? This accident points out that it is very difficult to consider all the variables that can happen in a fall. It's better not to fall. At such times, we have to honor the victim and console those who were a part of this tragedy. However, we must investigate the accident and try to recreate what happened so that the rest of us can learn better how to climb safely and possibly make changes to our gear. As such, we gather here to honor Danny and his love for climbing. We know that Danny would want the answers to what happened so that this doesn't happen to other climbers.

  • @alshaver3742
    @alshaver374210 ай бұрын

    UIAA specs (such as 7-8 falls) are useful in comparing one rope to another. They have virtually no value in real world climbing. Even if the leader's mass were equal to the UIAA test weight, the spindle diameter in the test is much greater than a carabiner plus other differences conducted identically each time in a laboratory. It's very dangerous to think that a 7-8 fall rope will take 7-8 falls in the real world. It may take 30 falls, it may be unsafe after 1 fall. Thank you for posting the video. It's important to analyze and discuss all accidents. Especially when life is lost.

  • @dethsproductions
    @dethsproductions10 ай бұрын

    First and foremost, RIP Danny... =( I had an idea about how to target a certain part of rope. Instead of using tape or something like that, which can be moved from pressure via a carabiner, etc, but instead use spray paint. Like, use two pieces of cardboard to help narrow down where the paint lands on the rope for a finer line to help target spots. Could be useful in examining different tests when looking at a specific spot on a rope.

  • @johng1097
    @johng109710 ай бұрын

    Looking forward to any amount of analysis testing you can come up with. I’m particularly concerned that the gunshot noise indicates the rope broke and NOT that it was cut - and what this means in terms of general rules we should keep in mind while evaluating risks and strategies. Since Danny was reportedly a good climber, and planned to whip, I assume he evaluated his placement against typical risks - and would have seen and corrected a burred caribiner, or edge loaded caribiner, or crossed rope, or rope over an edge with sharp crystals. Especially since he knew it was going to be a long fall and was worried enough that he warned his belayer. So I’m thinking it’s a new risk that isn’t obvious.

  • @mrmidnight32
    @mrmidnight329 ай бұрын

    From the explanation I’m assuming due to the slack to the belayer never getting tight, and the snap sound. It sounds like it was in deed pinched higher “probably where the belay” was and like you said snapped due to less rope available above the anchor. The slack was taken up down the line somewhere, that’s where the failure was most likely located. What caused it exactly isn’t present unless you can get ahold of all his gear

  • @samiraperi467
    @samiraperi4678 ай бұрын

    Seatbelts will absolutely help even in a head on collision, as long as the crash structure works. You may get fractures but that's generally preferable to dying.

  • @dtownsendbrown
    @dtownsendbrown10 ай бұрын

    It would be interesting to see a drop test with varying distances over an edge. Maybe starting with the bottom carabiner at the roof (crossloaded on the edge) for the lowest test. And raising the draw each test until the draw is about 2 or 3 inches abound the edge. I’ve noticed a locking pinch that can occur when the carabiner is about an inch above the lip of a roof. Obviously, we want to extend the draw/sling below the roof, but it it would be interesting to see if something funky is happening there.

  • @ambrose13
    @ambrose1310 ай бұрын

    An eyewitness to the fall recently added to the mp discussion, "The rope was definitely taught against a sharp edge and the tension created by the fall was enough to go through the rope."

  • @johngo6283

    @johngo6283

    10 ай бұрын

    Well, assuming that is true, then that seems to be the answer. Occams razor - The simplest explanation is usually the most likely. Rope got loaded over a sharp edge, rope was cut. That’s an important difference from the rope breaking. My sincere condolences to the friends and family of this phone man.

  • @NPC-fl3gq

    @NPC-fl3gq

    10 ай бұрын

    Why would you choose to whip on that!?

  • @simold13

    @simold13

    10 ай бұрын

    Would there be a loud 'bang' if the rope was simply cut over an edge?

  • @TheOriginalJub
    @TheOriginalJub10 ай бұрын

    Rest in Peace Danny. Losing a friend is never easy. My condolences to those who knew him. Seems like a set of tests that could illuminate some things relevant to this accident would be drop testing with a carabiner laying horizontally with the rope running over the edge. So rather than testing the carabiner in bending over an edge, have the carabiner further back so the rope runs over the edge, under the carabiner, and back over the edge in the event of a fall. Maybe tape some sandpaper around a pipe and hose clamp that to a beam of the drop tower to simulate a rounded rock. I sheathed a rope a few weeks ago when I took a very small fall on lead and the rope ran over a wide round rock horn instead of coming tight on my gear (ironically because I extend the piece too far). I was truly surprised when I looked up to see several feet of expose core, as the fall felt totally benign. It really doesn't take much for rock to cut a rope under tension in some situations.

  • @Papershields001
    @Papershields0015 ай бұрын

    This accident gives me pause. I myself have gotten myself into trouble on Seneca rocks thanks to my inexperience and bad decision making. (Note: I’m not implying that the climber was doing anything wrong) Aside from that, I feel so much compassion for him and his family. He clearly was a great person with a full life ahead of him. Sorry to see it.

  • @SRSMTB
    @SRSMTB9 ай бұрын

    It is very unfortunate to hear about this accident, I am very sorry. I think it is worth mentioning the use of half ropes (1/2). This can decrease rope drag and a good way to have redundancy especialliy on trad climbing multi-pitchs.

  • @NireBryce
    @NireBryce10 ай бұрын

    the diagrams on the forum look like the carabiner is on the end of a sling (I'm not a climber, but maybe fresh eyes would help). It's possible there's a *small* chance that when you transfer from above to below the anchor it causes a wave in the rope that could (because the carabiner is also in freefall for a portion of it) maybe loop around the carabiner and *tie a knot around the carabiner*, further reducing the strength. This has happened to me at least once while rigging cargo to the roof of cars and beds of trucks with carabiners and rope. (And also, maybe some experimenting for things you can put under carabiners that don't reduce strength, but do ensure the rope is free to the belay, might be in order?)

  • @nathanwilson3185
    @nathanwilson318510 ай бұрын

    I’ve seen a handful of fresh out of the gym climbers taking whippers and rope swings at their local crag. In these videos I see them relying on a bad understanding of stretch, open anchor systems, and with horrible abrasion problems. I’m of a large belief that if you aren’t falling under normal circumstances it is a rope jump or swing. Your video described perfectly why no one should try to do rig jumps unless you know what you’re doing.

  • @brandonj8724
    @brandonj872410 ай бұрын

    Much love to the family, freak accidents suck. My suggestion would be to place a weight on a belay device such that as the rope is unweighted from the fall the rope will be pulled through the belay device as the dummy falls. If you hang a free weight on the belay side the slack will be pulled through the device as the dummy is unweighted. Again sorry to the family. Hopefully we can find some resolve

  • @kid5Media
    @kid5Media10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for your concluding remarks.

  • @bestbuilder1st
    @bestbuilder1st10 ай бұрын

    Tough subject- you handled it very well.

  • @Adrian.Werner
    @Adrian.Werner10 ай бұрын

    To test a fallfactor above 2 you could create a movable anchor point. The rope would be fixed to guide rod and is stopped at the end. Kind of like on a via ferrata which can reach a fall factor as high as 5! Maybe using a spanset for half the rope length would be close enough to static.

  • @SafetyBoater
    @SafetyBoater10 ай бұрын

    If you use a rappel rack and two ropes, I think you could use one strand to create a pinching force on the other and then deform some bars (burr, rough, gouge, etc.).

  • @markedwardsclimbing
    @markedwardsclimbing10 ай бұрын

    Be interesting to know if rope against rope burns was partly or the whole reason? As the rope becomes pinched then falls over the rope below the carabiner.

  • @z1522
    @z15227 ай бұрын

    The MtnProject drawing and analysis seems fairly clear; testing over a broadly curved rock section, with coarse texture, could replicate the binding of the strand from below, as the section from the biner to leader is trapped by the force of the fall - the abrasion under the biner could initiate the tearing of the fibers, while the binding effectively creates a factor two fall - maybe more, if several feet of slack slide down initially. Not really that hard to imagine, and surprising only perhaps as on that terrain climbers rarely slip, and never just jump off.

  • @Leander_
    @Leander_10 ай бұрын

    I don't think you necessarily have to recreate this accident. Rest in peace, fellow climber Danny.

  • @michaelmerrin801
    @michaelmerrin80110 ай бұрын

    could an ATC in guide mode/ follower belay be used to simulate a pinch? Such a sad story and praying for Danny's friends and family

  • @cameronmclean3375
    @cameronmclean337510 ай бұрын

    i went climbing with my friend who was at seneca during the accident and he was really on edge

  • @TheSpudmckenzie
    @TheSpudmckenzie10 ай бұрын

    It would be interesting to see what rock is the most abrasive or cuts/degrades the sheath quickest. I know that would be tricky due to heaps of variables, but maybe with lots of provisos and stretching rope over different rocks?

  • @vega1287
    @vega128710 ай бұрын

    to reproduce the pinching i´d take the camcrusher 2 at an angle, use a soft shackle to hang the carabener so the rope will get pinched at the edge.

  • @sethgilbertson2474
    @sethgilbertson247410 ай бұрын

    This is heartbreaking.

  • @kavemanthewoodbutcher
    @kavemanthewoodbutcher10 ай бұрын

    RIP Daniel. To the rest of y'all, Climb High, Be Safe.

  • @nicknoonan8612
    @nicknoonan861210 ай бұрын

    RIP Danny. This one hits home because I also lost a brother named Danny years ago. Ryan, what if you were to recreate a pinching scenario like you described in the video by clamping rocks/crab/rope together in the right position? Maybe a quickgrip clamp would do the trick?

  • @ryanp0342
    @ryanp034210 ай бұрын

    I hope his climbing partner doesn't blame themselves. Quick thought on a way to test it. Anchor the belayer side and tension climber side of the rope with the carabiner pinching against a rock. If you could wrap straps around the carabiner to maintain the pinch enough to release the tension on the climber side of the rope. Then add weight and do a normal drop test. Hard part would be tensioning it against a rough surface or burr. Might need to use some removable blocks to hold the carabiner/rope off the rock/burr until tensioning has been completed.

  • @bryancayouette1618
    @bryancayouette161810 ай бұрын

    A possible option for a drop test where you can pull slack during the fall and get the rope pinched at the carabiner would be to use an alpine clutch/garda hitch? Just a suggestion, this definitely is not an easy test to do!

  • @yauheniarlinski9259
    @yauheniarlinski92594 ай бұрын

    fall factor > 2: two person tied with a rope, walk at the same time on ice (up, few point between). second one fall, pull the rope => first one fall and length of the rope becomes less than length of fall test idea: main dumbbell on the top of the tower (stable but on the edge). + rope + Garda hitch + small dumbbell somewhere near the ground(limit how much you can reduce the rope)

  • @demoniccat1005
    @demoniccat100510 ай бұрын

    So sad what happened. Seneca is a great place to trad climb, but it has many drawbacks. Was just out there, and heard about it. Really tragic

  • @RustyorBroken
    @RustyorBroken10 ай бұрын

    I would try to setup a piece of rock that was as close the the actual conditions and do whatever to pinch the rope accordingly. Was there a sharp edge on the rock?