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CLIMBING TOOLS: Placing an Ice Screw

mikebarter387 mikebarter387·194 videos
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Uploaded on Mar 1, 2007

The hardest part of climbing ice is not climbing ice it is placing protection. Paul (not his real name) walks us through a simple demo of how to place an ice screw. Although this was shot some time ago the principal is the same. Just that the gear is a lot better and the process is a lot easier.

COMPANY OF CANADIAN MOUNTAIN GUIDES
BANFF CANADA
1 403 760 5731
ccmg@mountainguide.com
http://www.mountainguide.com

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Uploader Comments (mikebarter387)

  • wormly81

    Agreed with all caps... testing has shown that the method of failure of screws in good ice is a bending which leads to ice failure. Having the screw in slightly angled towards the direction of pull reduces the likelyhood of placement failure. In response to mikebarter387, theres always an exception to the rule, but placing screws in rotten ice which require an upward orientation is largely unnecessary as it doesnt creat a reliable placement anyway.

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  • mikebarter387

    You should check out Mikes Mail EP2 we talk about this quite a bit more. Funny everybody say's this but nobody does it.

    "In theory communisiam works"

    Homer Simpson

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    in reply to wormly81 (Show the comment)
  • Dave Fortier

    Dude I am afraid to say the dude in the block capitals is right have a look at what roger strong says on the UK climbing website. 10 degrees up is depending on the tube strength of the screw instead of the thread strength.

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  • mikebarter387

    We have known about this for twenty plus years. However the tube is stronger when the ice is bad. Vertical ice has a habit of being airy and inconsitsnt.

    I know whatthe guy is saying. Look he spelt it in caps I can hardly hear. There is a reason why we teach what we teach. We also let people know about the pluses and minuses of depending on threads.

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    in reply to Dave Fortier (Show the comment)
  • Thrusthamster

    Could be that you already discussed this with "gt40f", but I think that discussion was more about which way you should angle the screw.

    I don't have any experience with this, but I'll begin ice climbing next year I think. However, I read in Mark Twight's "Extreme Alpinism" that, according to research, the screw is more secure if it's not at an angle at all, but perpendicular to the ice.

    What are your thoughts about that? Should I use that method when I start climbing?

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  • mikebarter387

    Sorry to take so long this is from another poster cut and paste answer

    Unless of course the ice is complete crap or air infested. Perhaps when you have so little experience that you can't make a judgement call on ice quality. tests and real world application can sometimes conflict.

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    in reply to Thrusthamster (Show the comment)

All Comments (21)

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  • Steve Perry

    Personally I would avoid touching ice screws with bare hands.

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  • GrassRocketFilms

    Typo corrections... Sad, Suggestions

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  • GrassRocketFilms

    I think it is really as that you guys call yourselves teachers when you are not open to other people's ideas and skill sets. We learn from each other. The day you realize this Mike Barter, is the day you will grow as a mountaineer. This I not the first post that I have seen you crap on people for making suggestion or sharing experiences. Respect lies within you and passage is granted by the mountain.

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  • f lotars

    "Do it with your gloves on and then it feels like someone else is doing it." ;-) ;-) ;-)

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  • MrAnsonHunter

    I hate all the creaking noises....ahhhhrgg....that's terrible

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  • HHSFHarry

    The old school ones were like that. ; )

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    in reply to Mario Torres (Show the comment)
  • fgda10

    with gloves on it feels like someone else is doing it......lol. interesting vid, definately something i wan2 try one day

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