[TowerTalk] Tower Falls, After the fall/save
Jim Lux
jimlux at earthlink.net
Fri Oct 26 23:10:11 EDT 2007
Doug Renwick wrote:
> Good points Pat. A full body harness will probably add a few minutes to
> your life, but will it save your life? Unless you have immediate
> assistance it may not save your life. Could be classed as a false sense
> of security. But then it would be better to have a chance of saving
> your life rather than no chance at all.
> The best advice is to not get into a situation where you need to
> activate the full body harness.
> At my QTH I would estimate that it would take at least 30 minutes before
> a response team would arrive. Maybe too late.
>
> Doug
This is in the same class as the folks who do rock climbing in the
wilderness. I have friends who said it's not worth using 11mm ropes,
and you might as well use a 7mm or 9mm rope (saving the considerable
amount of weight of the rope). rationale: If you fall from a height
where having 11mm would not break, but the 7mm would, you're dead meat
anyway, by the time someone gets in to rescue you, carry the Stokes
litter out to civilization, call the ambulance, etc.
Same sort of arguments for folks doing rapid speed climbs (e.g. El Cap
and Half Dome in a day). At that speed, any mistake is death or worse,
regardless of whether you're using a rope or not, so why carry the rope
and the gear, which just slows you down.
I don't claim that the argument is valid, but it *is* a rationale.
There's a big difference between what's a reasonable scenario in an
occupational exposure (where there's a ground crew, you're in a area
with rapid emergency response, etc.) and a solo climb on that tower out
on the back 40 on your ranch that's a 3 hour drive from the nearest
town, much less a trauma center. Maybe the idea that it's better to
burn out than fade away isn't all that far off. In any case, a personal
decision.
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