Have you heard of the anti-cam? + cool video
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Have you heard of the anti-cam? + cool video
Came across this web climbing video project called The Seasonsand I thought I'd share because Episode 6 released last week features Squamish local Matt Maddaloni.
The Seasons is a 22 episode web television project that follows five athletes from BC and Washington through a season. Episode 7 profiles Matt Maddaloni and his goal to climb Up from the Skies free. Matt makes an experimental piece of climbing gear called the anti cam to protect a massive hollow flake.
Here are some stills from the video
Matt deep water soloing
Matts Anti-cam
On the rack
The Seasons is a 22 episode web television project that follows five athletes from BC and Washington through a season. Episode 7 profiles Matt Maddaloni and his goal to climb Up from the Skies free. Matt makes an experimental piece of climbing gear called the anti cam to protect a massive hollow flake.
Here are some stills from the video
Matt deep water soloing
Matts Anti-cam
On the rack
Last edited by squamish climber on Fri Mar 05, 2010 3:11 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Dave Jones - site admin
When you reach the top, keep climbing -- Zen proverb
When you reach the top, keep climbing -- Zen proverb
It's a pretty creative idea! Must be scary as hell to fall on.
Seriously though, no one else is going to free climb it again unless it gets a bolt. Not too many people are making their own "anti-cams". Still, I like how the route stays in the same condition as it was as an aid climb. Actually that makes me wonder: When you climb it on aid is it just body weight cam placements in the expando?
mmmm Seasons...
Seriously though, no one else is going to free climb it again unless it gets a bolt. Not too many people are making their own "anti-cams". Still, I like how the route stays in the same condition as it was as an aid climb. Actually that makes me wonder: When you climb it on aid is it just body weight cam placements in the expando?
mmmm Seasons...
- Optimally-Primed
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I made an anticam (actually 3 different prototypes), with Jay Burbee, during my undergrad degree as a project. That was 2002 (8 years ago). That said I got the idea from John, who had come up with it with Matt. If you google "anticam climbing", we are the first hit (we won first prize in the senior engineering physics project for it).
- squamish climber
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- Optimally-Primed
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I do still have our third prototype (the other two were reduced to scrap... test to failure). How well do they work? Depends on what you want them to do. Matt's flake is the easiest sort of thing to pinch because it has a big space behind it. Flakes with narrower spaces between them and the wall pose a greater problem. The failure mechanism is complex; it took us several pages and a lot of physics to explain it. Bu the bottom line is that if space behind the flake is a concern, then failure occurs by slipping and the materials of the frame are critical. Ours held 900 lbs when it slipped off. But again, it all depends on the flake.
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info
Hi guys. John Millar and I came up with the idea of the Anticam about 10 years ago.
Jeremy Frimer and Jay Burbee did a project on it in school. Their machine very did well but it wasn't highly expandable or allowed for one handed operation. It was these two very specific problems that stumped me for those 10 years until recently.
The Guillotine Flake has never been aided or freed because cams will make the flake break off, even body weight!!! but it is such an obvious trad climb feature... there had to be something that would allow one to protect it without bolting... Voila, solutions to an engineering problem and a place to test the ideas, so the game began.
Now hopefully time for the first ascent... we'll see. Stay tuned on the Season to see the finish to this story. Cheers.
mm
Jeremy Frimer and Jay Burbee did a project on it in school. Their machine very did well but it wasn't highly expandable or allowed for one handed operation. It was these two very specific problems that stumped me for those 10 years until recently.
The Guillotine Flake has never been aided or freed because cams will make the flake break off, even body weight!!! but it is such an obvious trad climb feature... there had to be something that would allow one to protect it without bolting... Voila, solutions to an engineering problem and a place to test the ideas, so the game began.
Now hopefully time for the first ascent... we'll see. Stay tuned on the Season to see the finish to this story. Cheers.
mm
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Matt,
Thanks for dropping by. The anti-cam sounds very cool. I'd like to hear more about Guillotine Flake and it's history. Has this route been climbed before? And it would be great to see some pictures of the anti-cam and the of the flake.
Good luck!
Dave Jones
Thanks for dropping by. The anti-cam sounds very cool. I'd like to hear more about Guillotine Flake and it's history. Has this route been climbed before? And it would be great to see some pictures of the anti-cam and the of the flake.
Good luck!
Dave Jones
Dave Jones - site admin
When you reach the top, keep climbing -- Zen proverb
When you reach the top, keep climbing -- Zen proverb
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