This rappel ring could kill someone

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 5 июн 2024
  • How strong are rappel rings? It only needs to be about 2x more than your weight to hold you during a rappel (in case you don't rappel smooth). Add a little safety ratio for good measure and it's super good enough. The problem is if it wears down. / kevhamrich pulled this rolled aluminum SMC rappel ring off a popular route in Yosemite and it broke at 1.5kN instead of it's 14kN it is rate for, which is legitimately dangerous.
    Our results and more thoughts are on our blog page: www.hownot2.com/post/rappel-ring
    👉 Learn and SHOP at www.hownot2.com/shop
    👉 Best EMAILS on Earth: www.hownot2.com/signup
    👉 SUPPORT US and get gear discounts hownot2.com/support
    👉 10% off ROCKY TALKIE by clicking www.hownot2.com/rocky
    Intro
    00:45 Aluminum Tests
    03:40 Titanium Tests
    06:01 Steel Tests
    09:06 Deadly Aluminum Ring
    09:47 When to use each one
    12:24 Bonus Test: Line Locker

Комментарии • 704

  • @HowNOT2
    @HowNOT2  Год назад +268

    I experimented with more text on screen to see if it helps the audience follow along with either MBS or the results or which test we are on. What do you think? FYI: the chart of data is on the blog www.hownot2.com/post/rappel-ring
    Check out our new store! hownot2.store/

    • @samlauer1
      @samlauer1 Год назад +27

      Love it!
      Edit: It would also be cool to see the live graph so we can see how the samples react to the applied force in real time (if possible)

    • @jonahhekmatyar
      @jonahhekmatyar Год назад +6

      Love it. Makes it super easy to follow.

    • @Robbieburnett1
      @Robbieburnett1 Год назад +3

      Love it !

    • @YannCamusBlissClimbing
      @YannCamusBlissClimbing Год назад +3

      I love it!

    • @HowNOT2
      @HowNOT2  Год назад +12

      @@samlauer1 that is something I definitely want to do soon

  • @jarodlojeck5150
    @jarodlojeck5150 Год назад +2281

    Off brand Titanium #2 creaked in the rhythm of the Super Mario Bros theme before it broke!

    • @niall6533
      @niall6533 Год назад +52

      Amazing! 🤣

    • @marvinschaefer3973
      @marvinschaefer3973 Год назад +74

      I heard that too! I had the video on in the background and I had to pay attention when I heard the super Mario bros theme.

    • @sergiej2592
      @sergiej2592 Год назад +190

      5:40

    • @yawningdog9894
      @yawningdog9894 Год назад +18

      Oh man I was about to comment that 🤣

    • @mastershake42019
      @mastershake42019 Год назад +10

      Awesome lol. Do do dooo do do doo! Baam!

  • @fictionmyth
    @fictionmyth Год назад +679

    I love the perfect Mario theme beat at 5:40 Good job setting it up to make sure that exact sound happened! Nintendo will now be in touch through their lawyers.

    • @Bonavire
      @Bonavire Год назад +21

      I was hoping someone would comment cuz I heard that immediately

    • @MrBollocks10
      @MrBollocks10 Год назад +1

      @@Bonavire someone did
      1 week earlier

    • @calebhohneke8482
      @calebhohneke8482 Год назад +5

      I didn't catch that when I watched through but you are totally right lmao. Perfect tempo and everything.

    • @Isontro
      @Isontro Год назад

      I noticed it!!! then I saw it was replayed a lot so I knew I would fine a comment about it haha

    • @Vexcenot
      @Vexcenot Год назад +2

      It's the ping pong video all over again

  • @MrMartroberts
    @MrMartroberts Год назад +554

    Thanks so much for breaking one of my Anchor Rings, guys!
    That's something that I've never managed to do as my load cell is 'only' rated to 50kN, with an allowance that it can be taken to an absolute maximum of 75kN 😊💪

    • @HowNOT2
      @HowNOT2  Год назад +75

      It’s an impressive ring!

    • @yaykruser
      @yaykruser Год назад +6

      You could just add a roll and double the power

    • @BuggyDClown-pc7sc
      @BuggyDClown-pc7sc Год назад

      @@HowNOT2 where can i buy that titanium ring

    • @BuggyDClown-pc7sc
      @BuggyDClown-pc7sc Год назад

      I could also use a ref link for a strong titanium karabiner hook

    • @zatoby6705
      @zatoby6705 Год назад +1

      You make good stuff

  • @patrickjohnsen4199
    @patrickjohnsen4199 Год назад +251

    I’m a member of a U.S. Army Rescue team. I love watching your videos and sharing them with other Soldiers. A lot of your videos definitely help build confidence in our newer members. So thanks!

    • @amarissimus29
      @amarissimus29 Год назад +5

      Ah, I finally get it. Support our troops. It's not bromide, it's about tensile strength.

    • @ev6558
      @ev6558 Год назад +12

      @@amarissimus29 Take your meds.

    • @jasonquiver6907
      @jasonquiver6907 Год назад

      @@amarissimus29 Take your meds.

    • @tstahler5420
      @tstahler5420 Год назад +3

      You mean, telling them their equipment is military grade, doesn't instill confidence? 😂

    • @korndizl9749
      @korndizl9749 Год назад +4

      Thermal camera view for the experiments would make for some awsome footage

  • @johngo-jl3uz
    @johngo-jl3uz Год назад +267

    Those Fixe steel rings are impressive. Those are the same ones that are on the bottom horizontal ring of those vertical chain anchors. Next time I hear somebody grumble that the ring is not redundant, I’ll be sure and remind them of your testing. 👍

    • @HowNOT2
      @HowNOT2  Год назад +50

      Remind them their rope and harness aren’t redundant either haha

    • @Riiyan
      @Riiyan Год назад +3

      I think the flex of the weld was what was causing some of them to fail lower then others but still impressive, I would defiantly feel much safer with the forged ones.

    • @probablyinconsistent4756
      @probablyinconsistent4756 Год назад

      @@Riiyan kind of interesting because welds are usually stronger than the base material. However "strength" can be measured in lots of different ways. Welding material also heat treats it which makes it more brittle, not exactly a property you want in something that is going to stretch.

  • @ronz101
    @ronz101 Год назад +34

    Stress testing should be an industry standard. This stuff is all too common. Thanks for reintroducing these facts!

    • @jmbt02
      @jmbt02 Год назад +6

      Isn't it standard? I'm sure manufacturers need to test if they want an ANSI rating on their gear

  • @markifi
    @markifi Год назад +192

    how on earth are you not breaking anything else in there under these insane forces? "holy s&*t" indeed. also, Bobby makes me so happy, he's the best

    • @TheBoatPirate
      @TheBoatPirate Год назад +15

      they probably broke the machine at least a few times before it got that strong. trial and error works.

    • @probablyinconsistent4756
      @probablyinconsistent4756 Год назад +3

      @@TheBoatPirate whenever it breaks, add more steel. Eventually it will stop breaking lol

    • @TheBoatPirate
      @TheBoatPirate Год назад +1

      @Probably inconsistent nothin too strong ever broke! ROFLMFAO

  • @ianthompson5575
    @ianthompson5575 Год назад +24

    as an aero space welder im surpized that the welded stainless rings were not 100% penitration welds. Which is why it failed on the weld joint and no somewhere else on the ring. If it were 100% penitration and broke on the weld you would have seen solid metall all the way through and it looks like you could see the flats or the bevel of the parent ring matterial. Of couse it meets the kN rating that its designed for, but if they were to weld it with 100% penitration i bet it would contend with the forged rings.

  • @203Tarzan
    @203Tarzan Год назад +20

    more arborist gear!!! we need it !! friction savers, fisherman’s knot, friction savers

  • @ozygoliath9599
    @ozygoliath9599 Год назад +44

    I have never done anything to do with rappelling or anything related in any way, but RUclips recomm3nded this to me and I found this super interesting. Thank you guys for amazing content

    • @miker3174
      @miker3174 Год назад +1

      Your wife is trying to get you into and then she's going to replace your rings with the failed ones! Did she recently update your life insurance? 😆

    • @John-doe955
      @John-doe955 Год назад +2

      Same thing here @Ozygoliath9599, it was still very cool.

  • @aurimatic
    @aurimatic Год назад +56

    If you pulled the first titanium one slower you coulda probably made it even more elongated. Strain rate hardening vs strain hardening etc etc

  • @IndyNDYT
    @IndyNDYT Год назад +3

    The thing creaking to the rhythm of the SMB theme at 5:43 made me crack up a bit

  • @Dremaus1911
    @Dremaus1911 Год назад +9

    i love how fast you guys shift over to the next frame instead of DRAGGING IT OUT SO LONG!!! love you guys instant sub!

  • @mausball
    @mausball Год назад +6

    Tension vs shear loads in welds. Pretty obvious.
    Also: Buy once cry once. Spend the money for Ti or forged steel and fear not. Rolled AL is cheap but wears incredibly quickly.

  • @Ataraxia_Atom
    @Ataraxia_Atom Год назад +11

    This was really interesting, it does make a lot of sense they the forged stainless performs better than the welded ring but I was very surprised with how much better and how the position of the weld matters.

    • @joelee2371
      @joelee2371 Год назад

      The problem with weldments is that you generally have to use a lower strength weld filler to prevent cracking and embrittlement as the weld cools. This results in a weaker spot, but, as you saw, the weld was still stronger than the required minimum. I use welded steel rings of 3/8" steel with complete confidence. Also, if the ends are bevelled instead of flat, you get a lap weld which is MUCH stronger than than a butt weld, cz the stress on the weld is a shear instead of a straight pull; this can make the weld actually as strong as the ring stock itself.

    • @Ataraxia_Atom
      @Ataraxia_Atom Год назад

      @@joelee2371 that would actually be interesting to bevel and fill the weld instead of butt weld. Like you mentioned I'm sure that substantially stronger. And yeah I'd have full confidence in a welded ring as long it it wasnt hollow

  • @3irc601
    @3irc601 Год назад +7

    Who else heard Mario at 5:43?

  • @newjoe2010
    @newjoe2010 Год назад +8

    Amasing video, really nice to see rappel rings being actively tested by other people than the companies that maked them

  • @napalmholocaust9093
    @napalmholocaust9093 Год назад +4

    Good titanium alloy. I've never seen it pulled like taffy before. Your pulling rig is impressive.

  • @thejellydonut7587
    @thejellydonut7587 Год назад +13

    For anyone who doesn't really know what a kiloNewton is, the last ring broke at around 300lb, or your average obese person. The strongest ring however would have likely held around 22,000 lb, which is about the weight of a semi (without the trailer)

    • @JohanMood
      @JohanMood Год назад

      Or about 100kg. (actually about 981 Newton)
      A way for you guys with freedom units to visualise this is that a 1 litre coke bootle weigh almost exactly 1Kg.
      1 Newton is the force it takes to make that coke bottle accelerate with 1m/s (a large step).
      Earth gravity/acceleration is about 9.81m/s, thus that coke bottle does 9.81 Newton (or about times 10 if you going to calculate it in your head). So yhe about 100 coke bottles, but more importantly now you should have to tools to grasp your own force quite easy in your head if you know your weight in kg/coke bottles 😊

  • @FiguringEverythingOut
    @FiguringEverythingOut Год назад +21

    Love seeing Bobby back in a video! Awesome classic break test video and super informative. Thanks!

  • @CleanIntentions
    @CleanIntentions Год назад +33

    Great thoughts within the last part (and, the entire video as always). I have honestly never considered that there could be environmental impacts with some of the (arguably) small pieces of gear we leave on rock. I'm going to keep this in mind for the future, I don't often re-bolt / change out hardware myself; but it's really nice to know in any case. Perhaps I'll find something like that one day, and be all the wiser about why it may be harmful. Awesome stuff as always guys, you're constantly making our community a better place.

  • @danoberste8146
    @danoberste8146 Год назад +62

    The welds on the rings would seem to be less likely to fail if they were welded in an oval shape (like chain links usually are). The one y'all tested with the weld on the anchor didn't hinge open like the ones with the weld on the anchor. The anchor tended to make it pull uniformly across the entire weld instead of stressing the inside edge first. If those rings were ovals, the weld would tend to pull on all parts of the weld.
    Worth testing?

    • @dragoscoco2173
      @dragoscoco2173 Год назад +9

      You mean instead of a ring to have an oval? If so then then it would put the wear in only one spot and that was the whole point of using rings that would turn randomly and wear out in multiple spots. If you mean the weld bead being bigger, that might work but would surely mess with the uniformity of wear too.

    • @danoberste8146
      @danoberste8146 Год назад +10

      @@dragoscoco2173 You're right. So the dilemma becomes: do you want a strong anchor? or an evenly wearing one? 🤔
      A welded ring that will handle ~50kN is probably super good enough.

    • @joelee2371
      @joelee2371 Год назад +5

      The welds on chain links are forge welded, where the link ends are heated and pressed together without any filler metal, so the weld conducts of only the base metal, the filler being provided by the displacement of the base, so it ends up being as strong as the link stock, and possibly a little harder due the rapid cooling; In every chain failure that i ever saw, the link stretched and failed on the side opposite the weld. Of course, this type of weld on climbing equipment is probably not practical, cz of the low production volume. Link chains are made in very high volumes by extremely expensive automated machinery.

    • @MikeDCWeld
      @MikeDCWeld Год назад

      @@joelee2371 usually a weld is quite a bit stronger than the weldment. That's why breaks usually occur right beside the weld.

  • @lawrencecole6527
    @lawrencecole6527 Год назад +1

    So at 7:50 I think what we are seeing is a non-penetrating weld on a tongue and grove style closing. The maker put a slit in one end of the rod, ground the other end into a wedge shape, then welded along the circumference. I believe you can clearly see the slit in the middle through the opening in the center of the welded lighter colored zone. I believe you can also see the remains of the wedge tip barely maintaining weld on the right hand top although the straightness of the leading edge has been badly warped as it was pulled out and apart. I'd like to know because metallurgy is fun and exciting.

  • @biblicallyaccurateangel2476
    @biblicallyaccurateangel2476 Год назад +1

    “how’s my hair” MAJESTIC

  • @timkirkpatrick9155
    @timkirkpatrick9155 Год назад +4

    Thank you so much for doing these tests. It helps validate manufacturer data and shows some of the results of sketchy practices.

  • @cody6009
    @cody6009 Год назад +1

    I don't need or use and anchor ring and I have no idea why I'm watching this or how it got recommended for me, I will say this watching a machine snap different types of metals and the process was super awesome watching, I enjoyed this video. 😀

  • @somanayr
    @somanayr Год назад +9

    Hi, I’ve done a bunch of blacksmithing, so I know a bit about metals. I think the titanium is not getting hot because of the force, directly, but because of the deformation done by the force. That’s why the steel didn’t get as hot! It takes a lot of energy to move metal, and when it does move all of that goes into friction/heating

    • @kenmercer2721
      @kenmercer2721 Год назад

      Agreed - it's all Energy = Force x Distance. So if it stretches heaps (more distance) when a decent force is applied it'll heat more.

    • @Puukiuuki
      @Puukiuuki Год назад +1

      Indeed. If it stretched, say 3 cm @ 80 kN, that is 2.4 kJ. Pure Ti (these are almost certainly alloy, though) has heat capacity of about 0.5 J / g, so if the thing weighs about 100 g, that would increase its temperature by about 50 °C.

    • @MrTheomossop
      @MrTheomossop Год назад +1

      @@Puukiuuki a big big reason for the high temperatures is the thermal conductivity of Ti, its pretty much the lowest of all metals, it allows the heat to accumulate very close to the fracture/deformation zone and doesn't give it any surface area to radiate/convect away.
      The rings are almost definitely Titanium- 6 Aluminium- 4 Vanadium by the way. I would be shocked if they were anything else.

    • @Puukiuuki
      @Puukiuuki Год назад +1

      @@MrTheomossop The difference in thermal conductivity of steel and titanium is only a factor of 3, and since thermal capacity of steel is about double, and its density is more than double, the thermal diffusion "speed" should not be wildly different.
      But just because the heat capacity is about double, same energy put into same mass of steel and titanium will cause titanium to heat about double the amount.
      That and the large amount of stretch at high force (which generates more heat in the first place) should be mainly the reason for the markedly different temperatures.

  • @gerritvanimpe9759
    @gerritvanimpe9759 Год назад +23

    There's been some commotion about the welded steel rings overhere, where cracks in the weld would mean sure death. So I was wondering what force a cracked ring would still support before it opens up. Could you cut a couple with a handsaw and test them please?

    • @HowNOT2
      @HowNOT2  Год назад +6

      If I had to guess, it would be between 4-8kn and most likely 6kn. I think an open ring would still hold a rappel but I haven’t officially tested that before.

    • @gerritvanimpe9759
      @gerritvanimpe9759 Год назад +5

      @@HowNOT2 cheers!
      If you get the chance, pop one on the rig for us 😉

  • @d4r4butler74
    @d4r4butler74 Год назад +16

    Interesting. Also very informative! Thank you for the info on why/when Titanium (I am guessing it is a lot more $) should be used, and the problems of Galvanized (Zinc coated) stuff left alone in nature.

  • @matiascorvinus1769
    @matiascorvinus1769 Год назад +7

    Bobys hair is exceptionally stunning in this video

    • @kieransimmonds9264
      @kieransimmonds9264 Год назад +1

      Looks a little like sketchy Andy’s big brother. And I totally agree handsome lad indeed 🍻

  • @Skim_beeble7125
    @Skim_beeble7125 Год назад +2

    the way that titanium stretched was insane and just a testament to its strength

  • @athir90
    @athir90 Год назад +1

    What the hell is this? You got me cheering for metal rings?!?!? My god RUclips algorythms, you did it again!

  • @tuomassyrjaniemi
    @tuomassyrjaniemi Год назад +2

    Welded 304ss breaks because weld seam is bending and it cracks it open from inside first. When weld seam is agains shackle the round shackle keeps the seam better in its original shape and is a lot stronger

  • @KartiacKID
    @KartiacKID Год назад

    Very cool video, I loved how it was puking excellent info out

  • @korwynze6288
    @korwynze6288 Год назад +1

    its good that people are doing their own tests this way like you guys do, since not every manufacturer is as transparent

  • @JiffyBiff
    @JiffyBiff Год назад +1

    I just like watching people break stuff !

  • @niknik0815
    @niknik0815 Год назад +1

    Love how you just faded out the rant at the end :D

  • @thegamingender6933
    @thegamingender6933 Год назад +1

    as a person who has done tig welding, including screwing it up, I can confirm that in your case, it was NOT weld quality, but rather where you were pulling on it.

  • @Delrioalmar
    @Delrioalmar Год назад +1

    Pulling on the weld was the reason why it broke at 89kN. Pulling against the weld was why the other 2 broke around 50kN +/- . Of those 3 rings, the 2 50kN +/- rings that broke while being pulled against the weld showed deflection before folding inward at the weld. The 89kN ring showed no deflection and simply stretched until it pulled apart the weld.

    • @HowNOT2
      @HowNOT2  Год назад

      That was my theory but I’d have to break a bunch more to really confirm it. It doesn’t really matter since it’s all strong but it sure is interesting

    • @Delrioalmar
      @Delrioalmar Год назад

      @@HowNOT2 No kidding. 50kN is gnarly good enough.

  • @connorwesley8757
    @connorwesley8757 Год назад +1

    The weld orientation does matter. In the first part you’re applying pure axial loading to the weld as the shackle keeps the weld orientation in place.
    In the second orientation you’re applying axial and bending loading to the weld, the bending loading occurs due to the deformation of the ring changing the weld orientation, this causes the weld to shear easier.

  • @ericenfield2193
    @ericenfield2193 Год назад +1

    I'm not a climber, nor have I ever needed to rely on this sort of gea (just here because of the algorithm), but I do have a topical understanding of how not to die when hanging from stuff and that worn rolled ring absolutely flabbergasted me! Why on earth would anyone allow their gear to get to that point?!

  • @speedbuggy16v
    @speedbuggy16v Год назад +1

    I am not sure if I am more impressed with the force required to break that titanium one or the deformation it survived before snapping. The chinesium ti was a surprise.

  • @mickys8065
    @mickys8065 Год назад +2

    If I had to guess with the welding issue, when you were pulling on the weld, the force was on a small fraction of the weld, since the inside of the ring has the least surface area.
    But when you were pulling against the weld, it was being pulled into a straight line, while the weld wanted to remain a wedge. The result is the inside edge of the ring was being pulled much further than the outside edge, which you can see around 6:50.
    You can also see the 'tear' traveling up the weld, until it reaches around the half way mark, where it flies apart.
    The end result is, the first weld only has to keep the two sides of the ring close, while the ring does the heavy lifting. The second weld has to help take up the strain of the heavy lifting directly.

    • @danbartonek
      @danbartonek Год назад

      The thing with welds is they act as concentrator of stress... When you load an oval shape, on a long shaft the stress is more or less the same all the way of the flat line. When its a ring angle of internal stress changes along the way (while on one direction its just pull on other it acts towards shear) meaning at round object the stress is not the same around the body. Weld (or area right next to weld) is in general weakest place of the object and different modes of stress can affect it significantly more due to stress concentration, than it would if there was no weld.
      In addition when you load something from sides, the joint (in this case U bolts) are concentrating stress as well. So if you place weld under the U bolt it weakens that by a lot. (And you load weld across directly which is even worse.
      TLTR: If you put U bolts on weld its gonna make it way worse, and with welds oval>round.
      Additionaly i would suggest using ductile rings in this case as when you start to see deformation you can replace it with new one, while brittle will just suddenly snap (as seen in video) and youre screwed.

  • @Wallys_Microbes
    @Wallys_Microbes Год назад

    Really interesting metallurgy lessons to be learned here!

  • @krucked24
    @krucked24 Год назад

    i don't do any climbing or repelling or anything of sort but this video was super useful information when comes to strength and metal rings i should use if i ever am in situation to do thous things or take family out to a local place i can look to insure my saftey and make sure resort or event i'm at has my safety in mine thanks guys for making this video!

  • @bryankano6247
    @bryankano6247 Год назад +1

    full value video! i personally think it would be cool to put a rating of when it deforms too.

  • @miguelandtrin6440
    @miguelandtrin6440 Год назад +1

    5:42
    IT MADE THE LIL MARIO THEME XD

  • @matejkubis
    @matejkubis Год назад

    Thanks! Epic insight as an arborist

  • @davidsidwell8749
    @davidsidwell8749 Год назад +4

    Great content did I miss the Dan Osman video you guys did. I saw the 5 minute one but was hoping to see the whole set up and jumps.

    • @HowNOT2
      @HowNOT2  Год назад +8

      Still working on it. Filmed the narrative twice and threw it away both times. I want it to be good even if it takes longer to come out.

  • @toddlaplante8583
    @toddlaplante8583 Год назад +1

    very informative video. Most of my climing was underground. Have you guy`s ever tested climing rope? I have some BlueWater 2 that i just pulled of a spool that i have had in a box from the mid 80`s. Looks perfectly fine to me.

  • @JesusHernandez-ho2si
    @JesusHernandez-ho2si Год назад

    This just showed up on my feed and I know nothing about this or what’s going on. But im enjoying my self, I feel relaxed.

  • @larryclemens1850
    @larryclemens1850 Год назад +2

    Watching the titanium change colour before breaking was really interesting.

  • @NateFanning
    @NateFanning Год назад +2

    It looks like the welded stainless broke early because the weld was "straightened" and kind of sheared it, causing it to split on the side and then break early. Pretty wild how well they do with no welds!

    • @smeghead666
      @smeghead666 Год назад

      Exactly what's happening, welds are strong but brittle so straightening it out isn't doing it any good

  • @ITzSmores
    @ITzSmores Год назад +11

    At what force does your machine top out at?

    • @HowNOT2
      @HowNOT2  Год назад +26

      with that setup, 90ish kN. You can hear it struggling in the video at that point. My new machine goes up to 150kn without struggling

  • @harveyscottz
    @harveyscottz Год назад +1

    1:19 Jokes on you bro. I'll go straight to the end. Scroll bar is there for a reason 💁‍♂️

  • @Noname-du3di
    @Noname-du3di Год назад +1

    7:25 the placement of the weld will affect the strength. The amount of force on the pull zone vcs the middle zone is diferent.

  • @HermanVonMisticric
    @HermanVonMisticric Год назад +1

    You just had a new subscriber for the brown stains joke, congratulations

  • @exicx
    @exicx Год назад

    Great video!

  • @barefootgardener316
    @barefootgardener316 Год назад

    such a dope vid thanks guys

  • @zachtherat1536
    @zachtherat1536 Год назад

    i dont even know what these are used for but its interesting so im just gonna subscribe

  • @nicholasrandell2310
    @nicholasrandell2310 Год назад

    That broken Ti one looks like it'll make a kickass bottle opener!

  • @phoenixofthestix
    @phoenixofthestix Год назад

    The welds would hold up differently depending on where you pull from. In the one test you were pulling the weld apart and on the other you were putting pressure directly against it.

  • @ahaha8
    @ahaha8 Год назад

    Interesting is the elongation of the titanium which is helpful to spot any overload way before it will break.

  • @michaelmccarty8238
    @michaelmccarty8238 Год назад

    Was wondering if we’d ever see Bobby again. Good to see him back in the vids.

  • @nueeeeeeeeeeeee
    @nueeeeeeeeeeeee Год назад +1

    5:42 I swear to god I heard the da da tu duh da ta

  • @tigersmith12
    @tigersmith12 Год назад +2

    Do you think that putting stress on them all at once is different then wear because the stress test makes it Heat up and wear cause micro fractures over time which makes it much more dangerous and hard to tell if it's safe. If it was stretched out then you would know for sure. I am just assuming and curious.

  • @combogaming7295
    @combogaming7295 Год назад +1

    5:42 I hear it everywhere 😂😂

  • @gerrycoleman7290
    @gerrycoleman7290 Год назад

    Thank you very much for the great video. Where can I purchase titanium rings and forged stainless steel rings. Thanks.

  • @th3b0yg
    @th3b0yg Год назад +1

    I don't know, I think 3,300 pounds is a lot. It's lower than the recommended minimum for climbing and I'd always buy something better. But I wouldn't worry too much that I was risking my life if I had to use one in some unusual circumstance.
    Very educational! I'm surprised at how good the titanium is. Stretching before breaking is a very good thing. More energy absorbed. The solid aluminum rings are fine, but the brittle fracture is a little less confidence inspiring.
    Great video, and I think it's pretty clear you know what you're talking about!

  • @hunterallsup2951
    @hunterallsup2951 Год назад

    at 7:00 your buddy explained it perfectly, the way you position the ring drastically changes the internal stresses on the weld, more force was being concentrated on the weld as the ring deforms on the second "lower strength" sample. The welds are more than likely the same strength. Welds should not vary that significantly!!

  • @user-cq4nq8ci9o
    @user-cq4nq8ci9o 5 месяцев назад

    Very cool!

  • @il24ir
    @il24ir Год назад

    Maybe you guys could do a video on the likelihood of a back clip resulting in unclipping. I know this isn't the typical stuff you guys do, but with the drop tower it's something you could do.

  • @kristopherfrootloops6714
    @kristopherfrootloops6714 Год назад +2

    No PETZL Open Ring?
    The P28 model that has a bolt to secure the gate.
    These come on their Arborist harnesses and can be installed after a splice is completed.
    Only ring I've seen that is made like this.
    I'm always orienting the gates where no force is directly applied.
    Even though their advertised as multi directional.

  • @NASkeywest
    @NASkeywest Год назад +3

    VIDEO IDEA: you have to get slabs of different types of rock and figure out their breaking points. I can trust safety rates equipment but what about various types of rock? Doesn’t matter how well the gear holds up if the fracture the rock
    Or break off.

  • @tehrater480
    @tehrater480 Год назад

    I think if you’re just starting to slackline, rolled aluminum is fine. as long as you’re not rigging long lines (less than 50 feet), but only if your metal gear is backed up. I always go around the tree with the tail of the webbing and tie a bowline on a bight to my line locking carabiner. That way even if the ring snapped, no metal would come flying at me. Good thing about rolled aluminum is that it’ll bend before breaking, so hopefully you’ll spot it

  • @EduardRitok
    @EduardRitok Год назад +1

    5:43 lol, super mario! 😂

  • @kamatisboy7173
    @kamatisboy7173 Год назад +2

    5:42 funny mario sound

  • @LynxSnowCat
    @LynxSnowCat Год назад +2

    Is there another variation on the linelock that uses a rectangular ring with a saddle-shaped pin/blocker ?
    Even if it's only rated for a hundred kilo (like the samples I used to have) it would be great for tying things down for the winter.
    -Years ago- in the 90's; I got a sample of one-piece *nylon* line locks ("for shipping and storage") that held two ends of lashing/strapping while they were tensioned.
    Each piece had pairs of integrated pins suspended by flexible hinges, shaped to nest *onto* a rectangular ring, instead *into*/through it. This avoided any leverage/collision concentrating force into deforming the ring while keeping the webbing flat.
    Having seen your demonstration, I think I may have been the only one who completely ignorant of how line-locks _normally_ work, read the instructions instead of 'clipping off the sprues' in the test group.
    (One in particular who ask me to show them how I'd fastened a set, got very angry and started shouting about how I'd done it 'dangerously wrong' and cut the hinges before becoming even more frustrated and hacking wildly at the 'incorrect' instruction-sheet when the demonstration loop didn't fail-apart under-load as he'd expected.)
    When I tried to get more, the (intermediary) for the company that made them told me that because I was the only one who had _any_ measure of success that didn't work for the MFG; no more would be available.

  • @user-dc5ql3jf7j
    @user-dc5ql3jf7j Год назад

    This makes me happy

  • @ashleyrose.
    @ashleyrose. Год назад

    That strongest ring just decided to pull an uno reverse card on ya

  • @LizDoesLotsOStuff
    @LizDoesLotsOStuff Год назад +1

    Im gonna be honest that forged one was freakin epic

  • @josephandjessicaweber613
    @josephandjessicaweber613 Год назад

    Yes is does matter on how you pulled the welds replay in slow motion the one with the weld in the middle it separates the weld on the bottom so it was like tearing a piece of paper from one side to the other

  • @comradegarrett1202
    @comradegarrett1202 Год назад

    The reason the rolled aluminum bent and the solid aluminum (almost certainly machined or cast not forged since aluminum can't be forged using traditional processes because of how aggressively it oxidizes) snapped is because different aluminum alloys have vastly different levels of brittleness.

  • @TheLochs
    @TheLochs Год назад

    I've worked with TI for many years. Many people think its hard, which its not, but its tough in that it stretches and its very hard to break.
    Its almost as strong as Steel at half the weight.

  • @AlwayzPr0
    @AlwayzPr0 Год назад +1

    that titanium breaking was nuts

  • @Mephistopholies
    @Mephistopholies Год назад

    Good show!

  • @molokaibro
    @molokaibro Год назад

    Love the leoni meadows camp coat.

  • @honeybadgeractual5734
    @honeybadgeractual5734 Год назад

    Just so y'all know on the steel 304 rings with welds.
    Those broke the way they did because of weld normalization, and loading.
    Likely the rings weren't heat treated properly to normalize them after being welded, which leaves weakened areas around the weld where the heat from being welded embrittles the metal. This creates a material situation where laterally loading the weld will cause it to fail very quickly, while axially loading it doesn't cause as much of an issue.
    The difference being the in one the weld is being pulled against, in the other the weld is being pulled across it's length.
    Because the steel (I believe) was not normalized you will see small steel fragments all around that area, they will be extremely hard, but brittle like glass.
    Oerhaps try taking one of the 304 rings and leaving it in an oven or hot area that's above 500 degrees for 8 hours, then slowly letting it cool down (this allows the crystalkine structures of the steel to reform and become more even throughout the piece of metal. Thus getting rid of most internal strain induced fracture zones)

  • @theexchipmunk
    @theexchipmunk Год назад

    That the weld broke on difernt stregth proabably has to do how you pulled on it. On the first one, you pulled it inwards, or together. That means it was not stretched a lot, and basically forced into itself while only a small outer part of it was stretched. On the second one you pulled it outwards, forcing it apart. Meaning, a lot of the weld was stretched and pulled apart. Which actually makes a huge difference on how much it can take. Because a weld can take much more compessive load than tensile load. It´s down to the weld disrupting the crytal structure and intruducing nucleation points for fractures. If you press on the weld, that won´t really do a lot of difference, but if you pull on it, it offers starting points for dractures to form and noticably weakens the material.

  • @TildaM1994
    @TildaM1994 Год назад

    I genuinely have no idea how or why youtube recommends me so many climbing/repelling based videos lol
    the experiments were super cool and I hope my nephews watch you guys for tips but damn youtube, showing the diagnosed extreme acrophobe isn't gonna make people much revenue in the long term XD
    Anyone who can climb and talk about climbing as nonchalantly as you guys are like the bravest people from my P.O.V, I can't even stand on step stools without crying XD even with ropes and harnesses I damn near wet myself on a high ropes course in high school when forced onto one.

  • @cotywarren2873
    @cotywarren2873 Год назад

    The two stainless rings broke at different pull lvls because of the placement of the weld in the test. The first one had a higher strength cause the weld was being pulled in the direction of the weld. The other one was against the weld.

  • @TheWhoamaters
    @TheWhoamaters Год назад +1

    It was definitely the way you were pulling on the weld that caused discrepancies. With the shackle against the weld it couldn't be deformed nearly as easily as with the welded area free floating

  • @thebigbail
    @thebigbail Год назад

    Damn!!! I was instinctually covering my eyes for the Ti ring.

  • @JustWhyFFS
    @JustWhyFFS Год назад

    Didn't realize that much heat was created during tensile strength tests. Super cool

  • @troliskimosko
    @troliskimosko Год назад +1

    It’s crazy how casually rope can hold this much weight

  • @alexeymalafeev6167
    @alexeymalafeev6167 Год назад +1

    Ryan do I see some of the non-rated steel / stainless I gave you on that wall? :) Can't wait to see you break all that stuff.

  • @Blue_Azure101
    @Blue_Azure101 Год назад +1

    I was looking at engagement rings and somehow this was recommended; my immediate thought was this must be from Venice 1600’s and the Medici women would try to poison husbands with a ring lol

  • @Riiyan
    @Riiyan Год назад +1

    What I wonder, is after seeing how much force some of the steel and titanium rings can handle. Why would you trust your life with aluminum? I don't even trust my aluminum boat in some cases on the water.

  • @unknown34633
    @unknown34633 Год назад

    as someone that used to build tensile testing equipment your machine gives me the heebie jeebies