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Tuesday, August 16th, 2005 12:12 pm
My major fashion affectation is my utility belt. It carries, going counterclockwise from the buckle: flashlight, sharpie marker, leatherman (Charge XTi), digital camera, monocular, PDA/cellphone. The exact contents and packaging have changed over the years, slowly being refined. I've put a great deal of thought into optimizing everything about it, mostly because I'm a big dork.

A couple of weeks ago I realized that I had been ignoring an entire component of the belt, leaving it completely useless -- the belt itself! Duh. So what can a belt do? Well, it's like a rope, but too short to be particularly useful. What if it was longer? What if it was a rope, but folded back and forth several times? I figured I could get at least 5, maybe 6 lengths before it got too thick to be comfortable. So I bought parts and started prototyping. This weekend I made the final version, which has a whooping 8 lengths, each 66 cm long, for a none-too-shabby total of 5.3 meters of 6mm climbing rope. Dorky? Certainly. Useful? ...maybe. Removal would be annoying, so I'd have to really need the rope before I did it. But if I ever do need it, I'll have it. So there.





Tuesday, August 16th, 2005 08:30 pm (UTC)
(Responding to this and your other comment.)

Well, the original comment that started me thinking was someone wanting to have 50 feet of rope with them as a D&D joke, so climbing was always at the back of my mind. But lots of the other uses require non-finger-cutting as well, so it seemed like the best all-around option.

It is looped back and forth between to D-rings sewn to the cut-off ends of a normal belt. This reduces the usable length, but earlier prototypes had problems snagging on the belt-loops right around the buckle. I decided it was better to just give up on that amount of rope.

Fitting it all into a fabric sheath is an interesting idea. It would be nice to have the ability to remove the rope and not lose all belt functionality. I had some ideas about a single strand of thin nylon to allow that, but I haven't added it yet.

Before I settled on a belt, I had a series of vests serving a similar purpose. I had a lot of trouble finding ones that lasted, but they worked pretty well while they did. That was also before I had money of my own, per se, so I suspect it could be done a lot better.
Tuesday, August 16th, 2005 09:12 pm (UTC)
I was thinking of the rope tying onto a cloth backing, rather than into a sheath -- a lot easier to get it off that way. It might make sense to have the tie downs be attached to leather strips -- gives it a little more structure and strength. Imagine a band of thin cloth, with a 1 cm or so strip of leather across it every 20 cm or so. To this would be attached a number of tie downs (or a single more elaborate tie down) so that many strands of roep could be attached, flat, in a ros to the surface.

(@)(@)(@)(@)
""""""""""""
^^^^^^^^^^^^

A cross section would be something like the above, where in ^^^^ would be the cloth, """"" the leather strap, and (@) the individual tie downs holding the rope. (I have kind of a specific idea for the tie downs, but I'm not patient enough to come up with a ASCII representation.)

My longest lasting vest was a denim vest to which a number of modifications were made (by me, by hand). I adored that thing... I haven't really tested the lasting power of the fishing vests of many pockets, but they always seemed like a good idea. Of course, my army surplus binocular bag recieved even more modifications, and had an adjustable strap which allowed me to wear it around my waist as well. It really is the direct lineal descendant to my current lumbar/hydration pack that I pretend is a purse. (See? Girls are supposed to carry purses. Any dorkiness is therefore hidden.) I only recently realized that the rope mesh bottle holders that I added to the binoc made it functionally almost identical...
Tuesday, August 16th, 2005 09:12 pm (UTC)
Aw, drat. I should have used pre tags.