Someone should make edible chalk that tastes like chocolate and is named chalkolate
@agartz41044 ай бұрын
I like the way you think
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
I think you're onto something...
@Zaphod_4 ай бұрын
So just like, cocoa powder?
@victorvieira74694 ай бұрын
Wait, isn’t chalk already edible? I’ve been eating it for years for extra performance 😶
@walaways4 ай бұрын
Wow❤
@nounta10164 ай бұрын
When you poured it onto your hand and I saw nothing. I thought of tale of "The Emperor's New Clothes", you buy a bottle of invisible chalk, rub it in mentally, and you climb better because you paid $25 for a small bottle. That would have been a great april fools video.
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
Hahaha thats great. I had to film the B-roll shots of the Chalkless stuff on a black mat in low light just to get it to show up on camera!
@Marta1Buck4 ай бұрын
I had to look at the upload date just in case it was april 1st
@nino41353 ай бұрын
@@Marta1BuckSame 😂
@csn5833 ай бұрын
Reminded me of aerogel! Just a little cloudy and slightly tinted in bulk. I have a friend who never chalks and this could sway a lot of those people. I'll probably pick some up. $25 isn't THAT bad for an experiment. I've bought and DIY'd liquid chalk, so I'm always game to FA&FO.
@dor_quendi4 ай бұрын
Love the video, can see 3 big areas where this could be good: 1. Base layer - just use it in combination with chalk, so you get benefits of both, optimal performance with chalk and still good layer when it wears off during longer climb. 2. Competition ice climbing - yes, we ice climbers use liquid chalk inside our gloves! That makes it impossible to rechalk during a climb which can be up to 8 minutes. So this might be a good alternative. 3. Sandstone climbing - in the Czech and Saxon sandstone areas, chalk is forbidden in order to not leave a trace and also not damage the rock. If this stays on your hands and does not transfer to rock, this might be a great option compared to not using chalk at all.
@snador4 ай бұрын
Which sandstone areas in czech ban chalk?? I will probably visit one of them in a few months :)
@andrewhunter65364 ай бұрын
@@snadornear the German board along the Elbe valley. Here on the German side it’s Saxon Switzerland, over the boarder is Bohemian Switzerland. I think the general area is Elbe sandstone mountains. I was climbing there today and no chalk does influence the climbing but I will admit the visual impact is greatly reduced
@dor_quendi4 ай бұрын
@@snador Well chalk is banned in czech on sandstone in general. There are some areas where it is allowed or tolerated, but vast majority has it banned.
@anticoxchange76984 ай бұрын
In saxonia an ascend with that stuff wouldn’t count because of tradition, lol
@1TieDye116 күн бұрын
Seems like a major assumption that using this stuff where chalk is banned is okay tbh
@victorvieira74694 ай бұрын
If this is actually safe, using it as a first layer and adding chalk on top might be a game changer for me
@mmoss14904 ай бұрын
Have you tried putting some liquid chalk on first?
@adnh-thearchive1944 ай бұрын
Yes definitely want to hear the review of this 👆🏾
@victorvieira74694 ай бұрын
@@mmoss1490 I have! That’s what I usually do actually and I do think it works wonders for people with sweaty hands. But even liquid chalk still needs reapplying from time to time and all, so this could be a good alternative
@marksmod4 ай бұрын
this
@irgendsojemand50604 ай бұрын
Isnt it airogel i mean that’s know to be highly hydrophobic and heat resistant and unbelievably light plus it has a simile colour/ look
@FishOnRock4 ай бұрын
Silica effect on the respiratory system is very well documented, it’s only safe when applied in a way that won’t reach ur lungs- not sure of this product’s safety in the long term. That said, I’m curious how this would feel if you apply this with slightly moist hands lol
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
I'll give this a try and also try pouring water on my hands!
@FishOnRock4 ай бұрын
@@Natemitka it would probably work great for deep water soloing, since the water wouldn’t affect it. I wonder if you could waterproof shoes without ruining the rubber texture
@thommey86884 ай бұрын
Cristalline silicon dioxide causes Silicosis, due to the needle-like shape that can damage lungs if breathed. Particle size also plays a role in how damaging it is. However other types of silicon compounds are quite different, and do not always causes issues. I am not saying that the product is safe, I don't know if they passed any necessary certification to say so, but It could be misleading to directly compare it to cristalline silica.
@HighGravityDay4 ай бұрын
@@thommey8688 The issue is the body not being able to remove the silica compounds and the resulting issues(chronic tissue distress). Research suggests SDS deposits in the lung can be semi-permanent/long term and also wander off into mediastinal lymph nodes. The only misleading thing here is the bottle saying "non-toxic" when toxicology isn't the only issue. It's like saying "my fist is non-toxic" before punching someone in the face.
@BoyaClimbs4 ай бұрын
@@HighGravityDay As he said in the video, they already put silica silylate in cosmetics that people rub all over their face.
@craglevcarboncapture4 ай бұрын
I've seen a few comments on safety concerns since this product contains a form of silica, but according to the MSDS of silica silylate, it's fine as long as you don't light it on fire. My bigger concern would be the long term effects of anything besides magnesium carbonate chalk on natural rock. Some companies sell chalk with a rosin additive and some climbers have in the past been certain that they discovered the new perfect climbing moisture absorber with rosin. For the most part, people who swear by rosin tout the same benefits as this product: consistent moisture absorption and grip enhancement without the chalky residue. The problem is, rosin builds up on the rock over time and makes it slick as hell. Not saying that silica silylate will have the same effect, I haven't used it, but studying the long-term effects on routes might be a good idea. Also, FWIW, generic silica silylate is waaay cheaper if you were to get it from makeup suppliers. Generic will run $6 for a 29g package vs $25/8g package for this stuff. Take that with a grain of salt though as I haven't looked into that at all beyond the price.
@davidk35674 ай бұрын
Rosin is bad for rock and frowned upon in the climbing community
@DubberssMcgee4 ай бұрын
@@davidk3567 That was the point of the comment.
@tylerm1244 ай бұрын
I think adding a super small amount os super finely ground dry rosin to this would be great it wouldnt be near enough rosin to leave behind like any of it amd would mimic the tack feeling of super dry hands from chalk. Like add less than 1% of the total volume.
@jamieallan28594 ай бұрын
@@tylerm124Tiny amounts of rosin still build up is the issue. I reckon mixing it with a small amount of chalk could be an alternative, or using CL as a base layer, I've seen other comments mention that
@tylerm1244 ай бұрын
@jamieallan2859 fair I'm not a climber so don't have intimate knowledge of chalks and such.
@Konrado924 ай бұрын
Chalk get dissolved in the water. Also chalk was examined and it doesn't do damage in our lungs (minor irritation only). I think it's important if you stay hours weekly in that kind of environment. I would say I would prefer to breathe in good old chalk then unknown silica particles
@thelelanatorlol39784 ай бұрын
Chalk was unknown to you until you got to know it lol.
@pierreboyer92773 ай бұрын
I wouldn't be so sure about long term effect of chalk inhalation. People in mines get a fatal disease from inhaling rock dust called Silicosis. But well that's from silica's dust so perhaps chalk is safer..
@1TieDye116 күн бұрын
@@pierreboyer9277we can break down and dissolve chalk. Can’t say the same for silicosis
@1TieDye116 күн бұрын
@@thelelanatorlol3978sure and once this has been properly, scientifically vetted, it will also be known to me.
@Smrts9553 ай бұрын
2:55 im thinking powdered aerogel
@Antlove4eva2 ай бұрын
That was my immediate thought and would explain the price
@proteanaliasАй бұрын
Yeah that's what I thought when I saw it.
@adnan769823 күн бұрын
*Summons Veritasium*
@NourDjemhi4 ай бұрын
I wish you would've tried this on more friction based boulders like some really bad slopers or tiny crimps. Or maybe even just compare on a beastmaker and check if it helps to hold on the 45.
@foox610129 күн бұрын
I thought from the thumbnail is was a gas and I was thinking “we have solid chalk and liquid chalk now we have gas chalk??”
@pierremilot81174 ай бұрын
Would love to see a higher end climber / climbing that relies on friction more with this product and how it compares.
@chazott3 ай бұрын
I think there's some good information here that could be applied to harder climbing. He says his fingers are moist feeling, a little tacky. I would expect this to help improve friction in certain conditions on slopers and slopey crimps, especially when it's very dry or cold conditions and the rock is feeling glassy. But it would decrease performance on smaller sharp holds where that super dry, hard finger tip is important. Depends on the conditions and the route, and of course, each climber's skin.
@pierremilot81173 ай бұрын
@@chazott I feel like anything v9 or above needs a certain level of dryness for most climbers. Although people's skin conditions differ, I was more wondering if this would even be a viable option in general for any climbing v9+ friction wise (though I understand it could have some specific or niche applications).
@chazott3 ай бұрын
@@pierremilot8117 I know some V12 climbers who put water on their hands before chalk or instead of chalk. Everybody is different. Too much chalk can cause excess dryness and splits. Carlo Traversi talked about using wet chalk (not liquid chalk) to send a highly friction dependent V16 FA in Yosemite. I'm sure he wouldn't be doing that if it was razor crimps. But yeah, jury is still out on this stuff and how it would fit in the mix, if its safe to use.
@PheenKnowsBest4 ай бұрын
Would like to think about the long term use of this on real rock, especially sandstone and slate, would you think a build up on the holds would be an issue? also the use of brushing with this / the overall performance of an outdoor hold of this pre/post rain and wind.
@bullydungeon96314 ай бұрын
Silica instantly raises my hackles, silicosis is a big issue in comstruction. Apparently this is a well known product used already in make up and is created to be non lumg damaging but i still think about the sheer abount of chalk on everything and cringe
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
I didn’t know this. Very interesting. I’ll have to look into this! Thanks!
@somanayr4 ай бұрын
I wonder if the particles are large enough to not be dangerous?
@Tyler.80464 ай бұрын
@@somanayrThey'd have to be airborne, which doesn't seem likely, although I'd be careful about touching your face and eyes
@Syntax1963A4 ай бұрын
@@Tyler.8046 - the stuff gets airborne 100% - how do you think it is applied - as shown, you pour into your hands and then you rub it 'in' - in this process 100% some particles get airborne - so on every use you get some into your lung.
@Tyler.80464 ай бұрын
@@Syntax1963A So, I did more research on this, and you're just wrong. Not only is this not crystalline silica, it's silica silylate which has published studies showing it's safe in concentrations as high as 25%. Additionally, these studies were largely conducted for use in cosmetics which are applied directly to the face. So, not only would I expect this use case to be safe, it's arguably safer than its typical use case. Anyone arguing that silicosis is a serious concern with this product is almost certainly fear mongering because it's a new and unknown product.
@danielwolf694 ай бұрын
Slightly skeptical about the silica part. It's deemed safe in most applications due to not being aerosolized. But this seems to be much easier to become airborne which could raise issues when being used by multiple people in a climbing gym. Excited to see something this game-changing come to the sport though!
@Jovi_974 ай бұрын
As someone with sweaty hands, I wonder if the two combined would provide a benefit compared to having to re-chalk mid-problem on trickier climbs
@thehuntressdanni29724 ай бұрын
Try your antiperspirant and see?
@gretabird73052 ай бұрын
Honestly, it scares me that people could start using this and I could be exposed to it unwittingly in climbing gyms. Its bad enough that there's extremely high levels of aerosolized rubber in indoor climbing gym air, now we're going to add a chemical with questionable safety studies and chemically similar to a known carcinogen?? The studies I read only tested aerosolized impacts 3 months out, with the longest test range being 24 months for reproducive effects in mice. This just seems woefully insufficient. Additionally, I have very little faith in safety records of "new chemicals"... My mom's a nurse and she had plenty of patients - young men - dying of silicosis. She also told me about the link between baby powder and ovarian cancer 30 years before the big lawsuits. Anecdotal, I know, but this very much informs my opinion on these things; that often it takes many years before a safety warning is issued from goverment groups. Ex) just because aerosolized products like spray deodorants and febreeze, which we know are dangerous for our lungs, are still on shelves, doesn't mean they are safe. And you can still buy baby powder... people are just now getting concerned about phthalates, which weve known forever are dangerous... etc. etc. A bit of a worried ramble, but in conclusion I just find it really concerning that this video promotes a possibly dangerous product and was published by someone who clearly has zero knowledge about the danger of silica (see comments).
@Peter-Salmianka-y3sКүн бұрын
I absolutely agree. Classic magnesium caused me an allergy years ago. I can't breathe it in closed spaces. I can only climb outside.
@gashsoho4 ай бұрын
maybe a good option for people that dont like to use chalk, or because the skin goes too dry, but really dont think is something that will replace normal chalk in any way.
@1TieDye116 күн бұрын
Good for gyms that don’t allow chalk too
@agario51614 ай бұрын
cool i didn't think that aerogel powder would work as "chalk"
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
It was pretty surprising to me!
@danobable3 ай бұрын
I was thinking it was aerogel too. I once ordered a sample of aerogel based insulation blanket and in the bag it had lots of 'powder', after handling it I had very dry hands and also read it was a serious desicant. I did try it down the wall once and it was ok. It's weird stuff!
4 ай бұрын
It might be also a gamechanger in fragile areas where ethics does not allow chalk (eg. some sandstones in Czechia and a few adjacent sectors in Poland)
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
For sure, I used to climb on sea cliffs in northern Minnesota that had a no-chalk ethic and I always hated how sweaty my hands would get!
@1TieDye116 күн бұрын
If chalk isn’t ethical in a circumstance, i don’t think you can assume that this stuff is ethical.
@interestings78664 ай бұрын
You really should do this test over 3 days; normal chalk, no chalk, the new chalk. Then repeat the exact same routes each day
@maseratidyce35874 ай бұрын
There’s still a huge variable in how locked in he is and how recovered he is, muscular, cardiovascular, and neurological recovery all come into play. In other words, it’s not that deep dawg. You’d know if this worked better for you during your warmup.
@mixolt233 ай бұрын
"Lets dehydrate", I like this phrase ;)
@dinoshark59864 ай бұрын
you should try this but with real skin tests like a timed sloper, timed hangboard and other things like that, i think the giant ball would be a great test as well
@graydeotto28204 ай бұрын
I wonder how it would perform using both, this to decrease overall sweat levels but chalk to maximize performance
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
So I just had a gym session yesterday and tried both, I still found myself having to chalk up a decent amount, because the chalk still will wipe away from the climbing holds. But that said I was sweating a fair bit because I was doing higher volume with lower rests and I didn't notice my hands sweating that much. It was pretty similar to what I experienced from my first test in the video!
@1TieDye116 күн бұрын
I was thinking about mixing some chalk into the stuff to see if it still works well and lasts longer
@csn5833 ай бұрын
Very thoughtful review, thanks! I am very curious whether it would play well with chalk before or after. I already use a liquid base coat and top off with a chalk sock. I wonder if this would behave similarly, but require much less topping up.
@Natemitka3 ай бұрын
I dont use liquid chalk so hard to say! I should try some of that out
@PopeyeTheVRManАй бұрын
As a climber with sweaty fingers I am very interested in trying this stuff. I do really enjoy the feeling and effectiveness of chalk, but I'm fascinated by new technologies like this!
@youzoubbaff63014 ай бұрын
I’m genuinely curious about this product because, as a climber who sweats near 0% of my hands, I use chalk to prevent my skin from being used too quick. So my question is: did you feel like you used much more skin than usually? and was the feeling more painful when slipping off some ruggish holds?
@DigitalViscosity13 күн бұрын
You're right on the money about the psychological aspect of it. Human's by nature are ritualistic and that does affect our mindset and performance. That would always edge out chalk for me because I am used to that ritual of study the route, psyche up, chalk up, and send.
@MrBoubource4 ай бұрын
3:30 it's hard to hear your voice because of the loud music. Super weird looking product, I hope to try it once one day 😍
@iiMEiii4 ай бұрын
Gotta wonder what the particle size is on that stuff because if you grind up silica small enough its very dangerous.
@tobyooj26833 ай бұрын
Is this like the powder version of aerogel
@cloudyview8 күн бұрын
Was going to say/ask the same. Definitely looks like aerogel, and many aerogels are silica based.
@indigobasile38834 ай бұрын
I think we would all love to see a video on its performance in combination with chalk!
@kai-z8i4x4 ай бұрын
How is it on dual-texture holds? It is well known that non-chalked hands can have an advantage at these. Perhaps this is a good mix between dry hands for normal holds and not too dry for smooth holds? And it would be nice to see how it affects the holds long-term, does it spread to the holds such that they get (a bit) water-resistent? Will it be a problem for cleaning them?
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
Would love to try this out, going to go try some soon!
@graydeotto28204 ай бұрын
Would also be cool to do some comparisons between hangboarding etc with this or your go-to chalk
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
Great idea. I haven't really noticed much of a difference between using this with wooden holds like on my hangboard and plastic like you'd find in a gym. But I'll be sure to give this a try!
@graydeotto28204 ай бұрын
@@Natemitka could just be more "scientific" to compare hang times imo due to less variables than with actual climbing?
@buoyanProjects4 ай бұрын
Ya i as thinking this really needs to be tested on crimps and slopers over juggy holds and could get a better comparison testing on hangboards for this.
@Bombsuitsandkilts4 ай бұрын
I know a few shotputters who use an absurd amount of chalk like 2-3 bricks per session, I'd be really interested to try for shotput specifically for putting on my neck.
@charliejonas34164 ай бұрын
What residue does it leave behind? Many liquid chalks contains resins/gums that build up outside on the rock and can turn natural holds into glass. It can't be easily brushed away unlike traditional chalk and thus should not be used outside.
@KeleMen1254 ай бұрын
how about combining both ? I have really sweaty palms and need to use excessive ammount of chalk, but if this chakless keeps hands drier, maybe it could lead to using very little amunt of chalk, for that extra dryness feeling
@kkaadf2 ай бұрын
I wonder how this affects the holds. Will it cause holds to lose their grip over time because it builds up in the gaps? Or could it make the climbing shoes to have less grip?
@2Bstrifeless4 ай бұрын
Curious about effects, if any, of it building up on holds. If it absorbes oil what does saturaded buildup feel like?
@somanayr4 ай бұрын
My question is: will this leave a residue? I’m worried if so, it could damage outdoor climbing holds!
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
Great question. It didn't feel like it would leave a question, but let me ask some questions and do some testing myself!
@somanayr4 ай бұрын
@@Natemitka Thanks! Looking forward to learning more. I heard some liquid chalk brands have been using resin, which leaves residue that fills in the texture :'(
@notajetapАй бұрын
So what if you used this under normal chalk as like a safeguard to keep your hands at least somewhat at all times "chalked" per say could be interesting for pro climbers when doing a long route and run out of chalk towards the top
@filipfrissen51642 ай бұрын
Do you think it is a good substitute to liquid chalk? In europe we begin to have more and more climbing gyms where liquid chalk is mandatory, which I hate because I feel like liquid chalk is considerably worse than normal chalk. I would like to hear your thoughts on this. Great video and thanks for the cool new information!
@Natemitka2 ай бұрын
It's hard to comapre the two, I've used liquid chalk in the past and never really liked using it that much. My impression is that liquid chalk would make your hands feel drier at first, but Chalkless would make your hands feel drier over an entire climbing session or entire climbing route.
@bb59797 күн бұрын
What if you use the chalkless and apply chalk on top of that?
@Mareo6964 ай бұрын
have you tried to do a session with chalkless at the beginning and then chalk on hard boulder to see if they can work together ?
@Darkolas4 ай бұрын
Chalking up isn't just about friction and/or sweat... it's also a sort of ablative layer so you're not constantly losing skin layers.
@sebastianflynn17464 ай бұрын
Nah, if its enough to act as an ablatiolve layer you are over chalked, magnesium carbonate is commonly used as a lubricant so excessive chalking is worse than non at all and why we brush holds.
@AahfaenDetteorkerjegikke4 ай бұрын
I think it's not because it's ablative, but because dry skin is stronger than moist skin. Could be both idk
@thenayancat88024 ай бұрын
Real question is, does a base layer of this plus chalking up work even better?
@roymeharg99264 ай бұрын
How does it behave when building up on a hold. If an entire gym of climbers used it on a hold would we be able to brush off any build up like with chalk? Would we even need to?
@andrewhunter65364 ай бұрын
Any information on how it effects the rock or builds up?
@Travestyyy4 ай бұрын
This will probably be a game changer for urban bouldering; areas where you don’t want to leave any sort of trace that you were ever climbing there.
@chazott3 ай бұрын
There are some outdoor climbing areas where chalk is banned and this could be a good alternative too.
@Kele85m4 ай бұрын
I am thinking what is the effect on the rock quality on outdoor climbing. I mean on some of the rock types it is not allowed (or ethically not allowed) to use chalk. E.g. on Andesite the chalk is closing the small channels inside the rock and that make it more greasy/slippery. It might happen with other rock type with the usage of this new "chalkless" product.
@Disosway4 ай бұрын
I’m curious how it does with normal chalk applied before or after.
@mchaten907117 күн бұрын
i wonder if the chaulk already on the wall messed with it at all? maybe try it again with fresh studs
@greenhat761818 күн бұрын
Another thing is if everyone is using this would it affect the holds? Cuz it looks like a plasticky slightly gel like substance and inevitably some will be left on the holds, I think? So if everyone is rubbing this gel off on the holds then would it make the holds themselves more slippery? Like leftover chalk on holds, but with this you can’t brush it off easily
@96annihilator4 ай бұрын
What if you mix? Apply the Chalkless, and then re-chalk (with the normal chalk) before every bolder? Does the Chalkless remain staying on your hands? Does the grip become better than just with Chalkless? Or, maybe, even than just with the normal high quality chalk? And the second question is just about the same, but about combining the Chalkless with liquid chalk. And the last question is kinda dumb, but you couldve guessed it: what if we combine all three? For example, some world class climbers do combine liquid chalk and normal one, and I do this as well from time to time, and it does have its benefits over just the normal chalk, imo. Mainly, its the longjevity (you've mentioned about this problem of a usual chalk in this video btw).
@Beans-nh6ro26 күн бұрын
Is this safe to breath? Although it's safe in makeup and shampoo, the quantity is really low. Would pure silica silylate be safe to use? Feel like chalk is much safer.
@skltr21Ай бұрын
What about using this as a base and then using a little chalk before each climb?
@NatemitkaАй бұрын
I've tried this the past few months and it works, but it's not as effective as just using Chalkless by itself, or using chalk by itself. Basically, the Chalkless stuff will wear down by the friction of the holds.
@zackpierce65414 ай бұрын
This is really neat! I definitely want to try it for working out. A couple of questions. 1. How would it work mixing the 2? Not to be a jerk, but i feel like you kinda did mix them with the amount of residual on the wall. (Not hating just observing) 2. How did it feel last run compared to first run of just the "chalkless"? Thanks for the video!
@averageandrew824 ай бұрын
Just bought some through your link, looking forward to trying it out especially as a combination with chalk!
@IAMDIMITRI4 ай бұрын
What happens if you blend it with normal chalk?
@neilgooge4 ай бұрын
how does this work as a base layer, then applying chalk over the top occasionally if you need extra grip?
@Nonsanity19 күн бұрын
Aerogel powder?
@nresiti3 ай бұрын
This reminds me a lot of "colloidal silicon dioxide" powder. You can buy it for indigestion, should probably be cheaper, and I'm curious how it compares to that chalkless stuff
@danielkunkler72934 ай бұрын
My friend let me try his sample. I thought it was pretty nice on a moon board session. I think I used more then recommended and may be a nice test for you to see if it feels better. I did apply another layer of real chalk about halfway through my session and felt good for much longer than expected.
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
Do you think applying more than recommended was better for you?
@danielkunkler72934 ай бұрын
@@Natemitka I thought it was great out of the box so maybe. It felt nice and grippy for me
@kajekaiori4 ай бұрын
I wonder how it would feel on Wood holds, I feel like those are a better measurement of more perfect rounded edges and way more reliant on skin friction
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
Totally hear you, I'll try to use this on some wooden holds. I feel like I dry-fire so much more often on a wooden board!
@ben_jammin2423 ай бұрын
Thanks for biting the bullet for us 😂. I think there's may be a mechanical aspect to regular climbing chalk. There's definitely a psychological component
@pierreboyer92773 ай бұрын
I usually cimb without chalk and it's not so bad (unless the boulder is extremely hard/sweaty). There's so much chalk on the routes that your hands are quickly covered anyway. See after your first route your hands are already quite covered. So I think you could have rubbed your hands with air it would still be not so bad.
@stinhhh4 ай бұрын
You gotta try it as a base layer! Like how people do with liquid chalk
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
I know! I tried it a bit in the gym two days ago and I still found myself chalking up a decent amount even with the Chalkless underneath. But I probably chalked up less than if I was just using chalk!
@DrArtiePoole3 ай бұрын
Have you since tried chalk over chalkless? I would love to know if that makes the chalk last longer/reduces the change as you go through a route without re-chalking
@TheDriftRat25 күн бұрын
tip for sand bag. throw a wristband or sock in there. and grip it. noice coverage ;)
@randybowman3 ай бұрын
For how long do you not have to chalk up again?
@Natemitka3 ай бұрын
It lasted an hour no problem in my test! I have tried it again and I would say it lasts well for 30 minutes to an hour in a gym, and climbing outside it lasts a little bit less
@Arunnn2414 ай бұрын
If its oleophillic then itll definitely rub off on the holds as you climb. All the oils and skin cells of other climbers that coat the holds will definitely cause the silica to bond/dissolve onto the hold.
@TestyCool3 ай бұрын
1000% This is an aerogel and can be mixed with your fav chalk for extra grip.
@leon-do4 ай бұрын
how does this compare to liquid chalk as a base layer?
@supernoodles9084 ай бұрын
DO NOT USE THIS INDOORS. Silicosis is a big problem. Do not use this indoors. This goes for any chalks with silicon based drying agents. At the climbing gym I manage and route set at, this very much not allowed to be used
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
Wow. Thank you for your comment. I’m going to reach out to the brand and some professionals to learn more
@CragDawgs4 ай бұрын
News flash any small particle can cause silicosis Your car realeses a whole bottle of this stuff every time you start it up and then your AC spews thousands of HEPA particles all over you killing your indoor plants and giving your pets cancers Sorry but if you are worried about things that can kill you don't look into the amount of pesticides in our water that cannot be boiled out and how we treat our water with bleach
@telkmx4 ай бұрын
Heck this video is even just really bad to promote this. I think he should take this down before he make any investigation this is super misleading
@kurtp54234 ай бұрын
Careful spouting nonsense. Amorphous silica gel is not harmful to lungs like crystalline silica dust.... it is just really expensive. There are lots of hydrophobic coatings, but chalk is the cheapest. This product is nonsense. I wish them well with marketing...
@rdizzy14 ай бұрын
I hope you realize that silicosis is just one type of pneumoconiosis, you can develop pneumoconiosis from inhaling chalk dust as well, on a consistent basis. Limestone miners get this sometimes (sometimes called calcicosis, from calcium carbonate in limestone, or calcite) any mineral dust is bad for your lungs long term.
@Skwashy04 ай бұрын
can you try mixing both ??
@WorldofKlown4 ай бұрын
That looks like an Aerogel of some kind. Reasonable chance your hands are completely waterproof after application. there's an action lab video of a guy in a pool coated in an aerogel
@philligerphil90874 ай бұрын
Seems like a nice stuff to have and try out. Could you try to climb the same routes with this new stuff and then with climbing chalk? so like, 4 or 5 differents grades, not at limit so you don'T exhaust to much, and then the same 4 or five with normal chalk? I would be interested about how the difference is. Thx for the investement and presenting this stuff.
@benjaminengel37384 ай бұрын
this seems like aerogel....I just finished a project where I used a ton of aerogel pellets and even though man this is like chalk but makes my hands even stickier. Silica Gel should definitely not be breathed in. It's totally safe on your hands, but if you are clapping your hands and create a cloud or drop the bottle it's really bad for your lungs. Not sure if this is truly non toxic. It's similar to Asbestos, asbestos could be considered non toxic if you don't breath it in. It doesn't hurt you at all to hold or handle, but is dangerous for your lungs.
@RudderBoo4 ай бұрын
I feel like this would be great if you paired it with chalk. You could put it on first and then put chalk on and it would help prevent the actual chalk from coming off as much as normal
@glassd9 күн бұрын
Is it just crushed up Aerogel? That's what it looks like.
@ohNONOky21 күн бұрын
I wonder if this stuff could replace chalk bags in disc golf
@eneveasi4 ай бұрын
This is really cool! haha I like the base layer idea most people gave
@EvanCalli4 ай бұрын
What I am really interested in is how much chalk I use on average per session, and whether this is more cost effective to use for the average session if you only have to apply once and get roughly similar results. Another thing I thought about was how since you arent using a ton of chalk this way, you'll likely not have to brush off boulders as often while projecting.
@pvinny24 ай бұрын
You can buy Silica Dimethyl Silylate powder quite cheaply. Wouldn't this be much cheaper to use?
@twixerclawford17 күн бұрын
I really wish you showed a control (no chalk of either kind) and also what would happen if you used both at the same time
@ciarandaly33424 ай бұрын
Nice video. The only other aspect I would have liked to see is before you washed it off you could have tried using chalk while this was still on your hands. May have to test this out
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
Thanks! I have another video I'm working on where I test just this! The long story short is that I don't notice as big of a difference with Chalkless + Chalk as I do with just Chalkless or just Chalk.
@MrOmerDalor4 ай бұрын
I have two questions: 1) It seems very chemical, how safe do you think it is? Can it causes skin cancer, hormones disturbance etc? What was the safety protocol and is there enough study? 2) Can you combine it with chalk / liquid chalk? That seems like the most interesting use case for me. That way you don't need to always chalk up on easy boulders when warming up and always have an OK grip even when chalk is gone and can't chalk up again.
@Scalemailmailmail4 ай бұрын
Stop being afraid of chemicals. You are entirely made of chemicals. Everything is chemicals.
@j.l.59664 ай бұрын
Never tried it rock climbing, but I’ve used it for powerlifting (deadlifts) and calisthenics. Replaced liquid chalk for me for my workouts.
@Natemitka4 ай бұрын
That's awesome to hear, I was curious for how it would work for other sports like weight lifting or tennis
@Haalo-zw2ffАй бұрын
That stuff looks trippy as hell
@HannyDart4 ай бұрын
Maybe combining it is the way to go. apply a base layer in the beginning of the session and then keep using regular chalk (but less thereof) throughout :D
@iangottmusic4 ай бұрын
I also question the health aspects, but would be great to have an alternative for outdoor climbing as I'm really not a fan of seeing natural boulders defaced by climbing chalk.
@lavoltare6307Ай бұрын
I tried this today and WOW it was amazing, my hands are very wet when they sweat, this powder is the solution.
@NatemitkaАй бұрын
Nice! Sounds like a huge improvement! Were you climbing when you tried it?
@shurikend4 ай бұрын
I wonder how it holds if you fall in water, during deep water soloing to avoid bringing a bag
@keacky52014 ай бұрын
I´m only wondering : usually, I climb for long sessions like 3 hours, and my skin is just shredded. If I understood well the description of the product, the "barrier" shouldn´t be active if the skin it´s on is gone right ? I´m sorry and not asking you to go that far tho 😂 Thanks !
@KiaAzad19 күн бұрын
How about mixing the two?
@tanishgarg483122 күн бұрын
Is that an aerogel?
@sunlaser65874 ай бұрын
I have some heavy concerns about this. I am quite confident that this product is based on aerogel, which is a silica (pure glass if you will) foam. when you rub it in your hands I think what covers your hands will be nano and micro glass particles, which isnt too great but at least it will be hard for the glass to penetrate. BUT this stuff can fly in the air like dust (glass dust) and get in your lungs, from where it most likely will never retrun from. Same for ingesting it through your mough when you fall on the mat that is still covered in that micro glass dust, where it slowly over the years will accumulate in your lungs. I didnt do any reasearch, but these are just my thoughts. But I think I am not too far off with my assumptions. Also: Regular chalk doesnt have that accumulation problem in the lungs and body because normal chalk to my knowledge consists of MgCO3, which can be slowly dissolved by the cells in the body.
@verdatum19 күн бұрын
So if you read the patents quick, they are claiming to use areogel, which would indeed be pricey stuff. If you dig deeper, this is going to perform exactly the same as a product called silica silylate powder, which is an anti-caking agent used in cosmetics. You can buy a volumetric gallon of the stuff for the same price if you know where to shop. You could potentially also use something called "fumed silica", which would be similar, but cheaper; it's used as a universal thickening agent. But I wouldn't recommend applying it indoors without a fine particulate-mask for concerns of lung damage over time.
@philhunt14422 ай бұрын
what happens if you use this in conjunction with regular chalk? why wash your hands??
@Natemitka2 ай бұрын
Using it with regular chalk, its kind of harder to notice the difference between the two! I used it both indoors and outdoors using chalk and chalkless at the same time.
@sebbejohansson4 ай бұрын
Started to wonder if it was the 1st of April 😅
@rankala4 ай бұрын
I wonder how good this is mixed with chalk. Just curious even though, i don’t think what benefit i would expect. Anyways I’m think of trying it myself. Regarding costs, yes the per use cost is higher, but how long dose one use last? Depending on the day, i can take like 40 attempts (redpoint says that with auto count) so 30 vs maybe 4 uses per session? Totally different story
@rankala4 ай бұрын
Also want to add, they say half teespoon, but maybe you need some more for leger hands to get this really dry effect