Rope designed not to stretch under load.
1In this method, a static rope is safest and easiest to use.
2Note: Never climb on a slack static rope using the toprope self-belay system.
3Tipping the balance slightly in favor of a static rope is its durability.
4Once you are securely anchored, remove both devices from the now-unweighted static rope.
5A static rope, which a shipyard rope presumably is, provides no such stretch.
6A static rope, which a bed sheet rope presumably is, does not stretch.
7Easiest because the devices will track well along a static rope as you move.
8Below this, we dropped our last stretch of static rope.
9Do be careful with a static rope: Keep slack out of it, for god's sake!
10Climbers experienced with this method recommend a 10mm or thicker static rope for security and rope longevity.
11He also carried that team's static rope.
12Even a short fall onto a backup knot on a static rope can cause severe shock loading.
14Use static rope, webbing, or cordelette for your anchor material, and build it low to the ground to reduce leverage.
15A fall onto a slack static rope could injure you (even fatally) or cause the system to fail.
16All these problems could be avoided with a proper anchor made with static rope and extended over the edge of the cliff.
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Static rope per variant geogràfica