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  2. Rope access - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rope_access

    Rope access or industrial climbing or commercial climbing, is a form of work positioning, initially developed from techniques used in climbing and caving, which applies practical ropework to allow workers to access difficult-to-reach locations without the use of scaffolding, cradles or an aerial work platform.

  3. Single-rope technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-rope_technique

    Single-rope technique (SRT) is a set of methods used to descend and ascend on the same single rope. Single-rope technique is used in caving , potholing , rock climbing , canyoning , roped access for building maintenance and by arborists for tree climbing , although to avoid confusion in the tree climbing community, many have taken to calling it ...

  4. Ascender (climbing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ascender_(climbing)

    Mechanical rope ascending devices were created by Henri Brenot, and were used in France both for mountaineering and caving as early as 1934. [ 6 ] A popular example of the ascender is the jumar, named for its inventors Adolph Jüsi and Walter Marti and the Swiss firm Jümar Pangit they created to manufacture it, beginning in 1958.

  5. Simul-climbing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simul-climbing

    Simul-climbing (or using a running-belay) is a climbing technique where a pair of climbers who are attached by a rope simultaneously ascend a multi-pitch climbing route. [1] It contrasts with lead climbing where the leader ascends a given pitch on the route while the second climber remains in a fixed position to belay the leader in case they fall. [1]

  6. Safety harness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safety_harness

    A climbing harness is a device which allows a climber access to the safety of a rope. Rock climbers use harnesses to belay each other, this is when they use a rope to connect to one another so if the climber falls they can catch them with the rope instead of falling all the way to the ground.

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