I used the Petzl Exo for 6 years doing structural fire. We had harnesses buckled into our pants and the black rope bag/descender was preconnected and hung from the harness. Kind of bulky and movement restrictive. Eventually they got moved to the airpacks. Our kits hat the long hook like FDNY uses on the end instead of a carabiner. The anchors we used were door hinges, halligan bars across doorways or windows, furniture braced across doorways, corners of windows with the hook dug in.
@enyfd6 жыл бұрын
Backstory is yes it is purpose built, petzl in conjunction with the FDNY designed it after 2 members were killed and several others injured in a 2005 fire in which they were forced to jump from the 5th floor look up the “black Sunday fire”
@Mechman09256 жыл бұрын
If you are like me Bryan you'd need a trailer to haul all your just in case emergency equipment, eventually the most essential of it has to go into a EDC bag.
@Mechman09256 жыл бұрын
Brian do you not use a friction hitch like a klemheist or autoblock in conjunction with an ATC for repel?
@shaneestes6556 жыл бұрын
I always enjoy your content on ITS. However, for $35-50 you can buy an emergency ladder from your local hardware store good for 13' (1 story + a little) but it also comes with hooks to attach to the window sill. I am curious what anchor point you intend to attach your rappelling line to. If you happen to get a 3rd floor hotel room, buy two :-) With the ladder, everyone can escape the room without climbing experience or additional gear.
@Mechman09256 жыл бұрын
In an emergency situation in a typical home or even commercial building one way is you would bust through the wall and would anchor around studs inside.
@shaneestes6556 жыл бұрын
In a hotel, (assuming it is wood or metal stud framing) the sheetrock would be minimum 5/8" type X. That stuff isn't the easiest to bust through by hand or bare foot. Is it possible, sure, but it seems like by the time you decide that rappelling out of the window is the best option, you won't have a lot of time to acquire an anchor point this way. For a fireman with an ax and gear on, no problem.
@Omega_G6 жыл бұрын
Is there a shelf life on the Kevlar rope?
@lisaball17016 жыл бұрын
To my knowledge, it's more based on the integrity of the rope. Kevlar if I recall correctly, is sensitive to UV light. And, it can look strong, but is actually degraded after taking a shockload or exposure to sun. I think NFPA standard changed a ruling to have a 10 year shelf life on all life safety ropes, which this kinda system is designed. Pretty common to have a kevlar blended rope, which I think Bryan's kit demonstrated included.
@James-ke5sx6 жыл бұрын
I think those are called snap-gate carabiners. I bought 4 at $11 each on Amazon Canada. Then the price shot way way up next day. Methinks someone made a price error. I put together my own kit. 3,000lb paracord, Omega Pacific caribiners, Sterling webbing, Rescue 8 descender etc. Just waiting for a Sterling Lightning Hook on backorder. Picked up the Grabber grappling hook, a bit expensive but you only live once. It's not for fire escape, just general rescue, plus I watch too much youtube. You guys get me buying stuff. KZbin to Amazon, press easy button.