[Music] Whoah! It's not a sound that you want to hear when you're out climbing. Is it bad if I scream behind the camera? How fuzzy is too fuzzy? This is the rope that I used for about two years of intense climbing... or at least this is the end of this rope. If I compare to the middle, this is how the middle of the same rope looks. And as you can see it's a huge difference. So the question is, should I worry about this fuzziness? Or another question that I see climbers disagree a lot on is: If i can squeeze my rope like this, does it mean that inside, core strands are damaged or no? So, to avoid breaking my back on homemade experiments.... yeah as some of you noticed it can be quite stressful so not this time. This time I decided to reach out to Mammut and ask if by any chance I could come over and nerd with their engineers. How dangerous is this? (laughs) We will find out! so this is a product developer from Mammut and you said you're an expert in textiles. Would you whip on this? (uncomfortable noises) Can we destroy this rope? I would say the core strands won't fail if it's a normal sport climbing fall. Within the first fall? No no no not the first fall. Would you whip on this? Oh yes definitely. How many times? So this rope is not the same rope that we used in an experiment. That one was a little bit worse than this and it kind of died. Can ropes die? Anyway the goal was to find out what happens if you take a huge fall and this soft spot hits on your quickdraw exactly on the peak force. And by the way this video is not sponsored, but in case you don't know, Mammut is one of the oldest companies making climbing ropes so they have some serious knowledge about that so I wanted to know everything. Let's get nerdy! I have a bunch of questions from me and my followers. Sounds great! Ah. You're probably gonna add 10 000 more questions. I'm sorry. And by the way the questions that you guys sent had some serious sense of practicality. A cat pees on my rope how bad is that? Or a dog peed on my rope how bad is that? If you have a dry rope we test it with human pee because I mean if you're on a multipitch and you have to go... you know... So you actually did the testing on this? Yes and the answer is no it's not dangerous. I wonder if cats pee or dog's pee is more aggressive than a human pee? Hey let's go do some science! So this is where the rope testing magic happens and this is where you get those six seven eight or whatever falls on the rope. Exactly yeah. Statistics. The scenario is like really really hard like we have a fall factor of around 1.7 we test the ropes with the 80 kilogram steel mass which is like super static. What are the forces on standard tests? For a single rope it's around like 8 to 9 kN. For the first fall? For the first fall. And... we had the first problem. so called standard rope test that every manufacturer does is super extreme. In order to make it more like a real climbing fall, we needed to reduce it below 4 kilonewtons. And if you ask why four, it means that you haven't seen these two videos where we tried to create their hardest real climbing falls and measure the forces of them. That's why I said like maybe we try like with a new rope to get like a feeling like what falling height we need to have like around this less than 4kN and then we switch to your rope. -Don't look, guess. -2 kN. 2 K? I think it's less. Wow two and a half. As I said these guys are really good. It took only one fall, and we got the force of two and a half kilonewtons on a brand new rope. And that was perfect because we were estimating that once we swapped the ropes to the old one the force will go slightly higher because older ropes don't absorb the impact as well and it's going to be a perfect representation of a realistic hard climbing fall. So here's the tricky part: when you fall on a rock, sometimes it happens but almost the same spot hits the -top carabiner. -Yeah And now the tricky part is how to place that spot that it would be on a peak force on the carabiner Yeah. Not easy. Or hard is easy. As you can imagine, once the fall happens the rope stretches and that soft spot that we are trying to hit will move. (indistinct) You thought it's gonna be easy? No no, I knew it will be exactly like this. The force to the rope will start increasing increasing increasing increasing increasing and at some point reaches the maximum, and then the force will start dropping dropping dropping dropping dropping. So the challenge is, how to position the soft spot that it would move over the quickdraw as close to the peak of the force. With this small fall scenario a new rope it's about like what? 400? -300 400 500 . -Right. A lot -So new rope would hold about 400 falls on... -Small falls -Like, realistic falls. Let's see what happens if we put that damaged rope and see if it's hundreds or it's just a few. Do you think we will hit that spot or we will be very far off? I think we hit it yeah where is it now? Like 30 centimeters below. Yeah it's around here now and the rope is tense so probably this will move up, how much we will see. So we overshot the soft spot just by a little bit, so we will try to readjust now and see if we can hit it more perfectly. So we managed to hit the spot at 2.47 kilonewtons of force, and now we will try to increase the fall a little bit to get to really hard falls. -20, 30 centimeters? -Yeah let's do that. Let's see if we will still stay in the damaged spot where it will just stretch over. So we broke the sheath we broke the sheath after two falls and you said it's gonna last! No but that's what I said like the sheath will break... What's was the force? The force was only 2.1. Only 2.1 kilonewtons and the sheath broke! So... if your rope is soft, good luck. If the sheath is already damaged like we saw it like now this will lead like to cut sheath like immediately. But the the good thing is that the rope will not snap because the core strands like are -still intact. -So how many falls it would take now to completely snap the rope? That's a good question, I never tested this. But we could do this I guess we can do at least like two or three falls now only on the core strands. Yes yes. Guess how many falls it's going to take. 20. -20? -Yeah. Wow so it took only two falls to completely shred this sheath. But the good thing is like a rope is constructed in a way that the sheath only takes around like 10 to 20 percent of the load, and the rest like the load bearing structure is basically only the core. Okay so The question is if you take a rope and you squeeze it so you feel that it's soft completely inside, does it mean that the core is damaged or no? No because a lot of people think that it's damaged inside. The core is still intact. Like if I were to cut the rope at that spot would i find some damage inside of the core strands? It's difficult to say because over time, the core strands, also when we do fall tests, you can see that it gets a little bit more hairy if you would cut it open, but it's just a couple of filaments that might have broken, but it's not that an entire core strand is broken, but it's weakened for sure. -Let's see if we can snap this rope now. -Yeah So how many falls you said? I don't know. 10 to 20? 10 to 20. let's see. So this is one multifilament. -Multifilament made out of multiple filaments. -Yes. How much? -280. -This is 280 inside of this so if I would take one, what force that one thing would hold? Well you would not test it like this because a multifilament you look at it as the entire thing but what i can tell you, that this core strand would hold 180 kilos And we are not even reaching -very hard falls yet. -No, this is nothing. -So you see? -One strand snapped. So you said 20 how many strands are inside? Two of eight! So you said 20 falls? 10 to 20! Apart from standard drop tests, what are other tests that are performed on -climbing ropes? - What we usually do is also test the abrasion resistance of the rope so there we have an in-house developed testing method. So it's a machine which pulls a rope over a sharp metal edge and we are counting how many cycles it takes for actually damaging the sheath. We have like two parts now broken. So we have one part and two parts broken! Yeah if we talk about abrasion resistant I have some interesting stuff to show you. 200 cycles so 200 times back and forth. Here you see a classic rope so it does not have any treatment impregnation, it's a 9.5. It's pretty -worn out. -It is worn out! It's at the point where i would consider maybe even -cutting this. -Yes, and you should. Then next to it, we have also 9.5 but it has the dry treatment. -What? That's a huge difference! -Yes. That's exactly the same rope but just -dry treated? -Yes. that's a huge huge difference. It feels a little bit burnt like when you touch it, it definitely got hot, like on the edge. So your six lives got a bit damaged. But that's good to know that you can climb. You can climb? You would climb on this?! I mean the Fitz Traverse was done by Sean Villanueva like with a sheath-cut rope, like from the beginning. On I think the second pitch or the third pitch he had a stone fall, and his rope already got cut. Like the sheath was completely damaged, and he did the whole Fitz Traverse with this rope then. He like rappelled a lot over it. Does the percentage of sheath versus core strands... -It's not always the same. -In sport climbing ropes? Yeah or like climbing -ropes in general. -It's not always the -same now? -No. -And what does it depend on? -Well for us it depends on what kind of rope we want -to make. -Sport Climbing. Wait let me show you something. -Show me something. -Okay so you have the interplay of both the percentage of material that is the sheath but also how the sheath was constructed. For example here on this rope we have more sheath twines so if you would count these singular ones, they are much more than on -this sheath. -Oh yeah that's almost double, no? No that it isn't but it's just a slight difference. But if you check out the surface you can see that here the little cubes that they form are smaller than on this one. So here we have a super fine surface of the of the sheath so if you for example would touch this one it -feels much rougher. -Yeah. so this is also what makes it more durable. Now one more and it snaps. -Oh shit! -No kidding! So we are still very far from twenty but -what's the force? -Maybe I get some coffee huh? No? (Camerawoman) Yes! -It was already 3.4. It's increasing and increasing so the dynamic performance of the rope gets lower and lower and lower. This one here is our workhorse construction. It does not have any treatment but we're using the best and the finest yarns that we have to make this construction. And it also.. I would say you know it's as good as the -dry rope. -So why not all ropes are made this way where we have finer construction? Because price matters. Yeah now I would like to see not 200 cycles -but 1000. -Yes they come here. -Oh really? Not to 2000 but to 500. I would climb with this one, and with this one. Or if i have A risky day I would choose this. Do you have risky days? Sometimes... Turns out size or diameter is not all that matters when we talk about durability, construction, and extra treatments might have a bigger impact. It's a crazy difference, no? Having in mind that all of them will run through the same process to the point where super thin 9.0 millimeters rope looked completely fine after 500 cycles of dragging it across the sharp edge... This one looks quite good. Like a little bit fuzzy but I would definitely use it. However much thicker 9.5 millimeters rope, but old construction and no treatments, were completely done. My guess is five more falls and we snap it. -Maybe not -I think we have to increase, otherwise... yeah let's increase. Everybody wants harder falls but it's already getting harder, we went from a two and a half to three and a half. To increase? You can just dropping keep dropping it. Yeah keep dropping it. So I will get coffee -what do you want? -Coffee. -Espresso? -Lungo? -Lungo if possible. -Are you asking the viewer? -With milk? -Are you sending it to the viewers? -You want a coffee? Now one interesting observation I got while I was making this intro animation, which by the way took me multiple days and multiple attempts, was that while the rope is new, the file glides over the rope very smoothly and it's pretty hard to make any damage to it. But once the rope starts becoming fuzzy, it becomes easier to make some extra damage so it felt like the fuzziness or the damage to the rope is kind of exponential the worse it gets the easier it is to make it even worse. Oh yeah let's do again. Only six strands left. -(Offscreen) Whoah! -(Offcreen) So... okay So you can come back already with your coffee! So the force went lower, but one -strand snapped. -(Offscreen) No, two! Two snapped but the sound of the strand snapping was (vocalizes) Is it bad if I scream behind the camera? It's not the sound that you want to hear when you're out climbing. Okay: the fun part. How fuzzy is too fuzzy or how soft the rope is too soft? When -should people actually cut it? -I mean you pull the rope through your hands to check the ropes. This you should do on -a regular basis. -And what are you doing -when you're pulling? - Well, on the one hand I feel the rope so I feel how the rope behaves. If it's super soft, if it's thicker, and at the same time you know you you pull it over your finger and you look at it so you do like a visual inspection. Beautiful rope. Would whip. -Would you whip? -You would whip. Oh the force went lower again so basically the less core strands we have, the better the rope is. The softer the catch I wouldn't see it that way but... If you want a soft catch just break the rope. So let's say I'm running my rope through my hand and I find a spot which is softer. So how do I know if it's already bad or... First consider the whole rope. I mean if you have a really soft rope because they're... I mean some ropes are already soft when you you buy them in the store. I would say that our ropes are a little bit stiffer in general and we do that to make them more long-lasting but if your whole rope is very soft and you have a spot which is just a little bit softer, I would not like say oh that's super dangerous, but if you have the rope is generally really stiff and then you have one spot with this ultra soft then you know something is not right there. And exactly what's not right there there are so many things that it could be. So as an example if I would be just looking into this piece of the rope, it would be pretty difficult to say how soft it needs to be and if I should cut it. But if I compare it to the middle of the same rope, I can clearly see a big difference. So this clearly is far from what it used to be and it's better to cut this end. And if you want some tips on cutting ropes check out this video. I don't think we can do another one. Unfortunately the rope kept stretching and stretching and stretching until we almost reached the bottom of the drop tower and we couldn't do any more testing, however we decided to show what happens if you have 80 kilograms of mass hanging on only core strands and you touch the core strands with the knife. Cut test -It just barely touched it. -What did you do?! You went too long. What happened? But what happened now? So it didn't break so I was right with 10 to 20 right? -Actually yes. -Yes thanks. So basically what we got is running very damaged rope on relatively hard-ish... -Maybe to normal fall? -Yeah, real kN scenario. -Ripped the sheath of the rope in just two falls which is very dangerous. But then it was good to see that the rope did not snap and only the core strands kept holding for multiple more falls so that's good to know. Pretty good safety margin But when he touched barely with the sharp knife the core strands he just barely touched it it snapped so if your sheath gets away, and then your rope runs across something -sharp on the rock... -Super dangerous. Yeah I think now we're coming to the second scenario you wanna you wanna show when -it comes to sharp edge scenarios... -Yeah. like the ropes don't have this high safety margin. Well! I hope that you are subscribed because the next experiment that I'm gonna show in the next video is gonna blow your mind, and probably change a little bit the way you care about your climbing equipment. Okay, now I need you to pee. Come on.