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The design of the Escaper is simple but brilliant.
The design of the Escaper is simple but brilliant. (Photo: Julie Ellison)

Testing Beal’s Controversial Escaper Rappel Device

This detachable anchor system makes a bold yet unnerving promise to deliver full-length, single-rope rappels. Is it the holy grail for rappelling or an accident waiting to happen?

Published: 
The design of the Escaper is simple but brilliant.
(Photo: Julie Ellison)

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Most climbers agree on one thing: rappelling is terrifying. While the concept of using a rappel device to descend a rope is simple, in practice it requires the utmost attention to detail. This proves difficult when you鈥檙e mentally and physically exhausted after a long climb and all you can think about is cheeseburgers. The margin for error is razor thin,聽and accidents often result in death.

(Courtesy Beal)

Those risks are compounded by the fact that most big climbs require multiple rappels to get to the ground, which adds logistical challenges. If you want to rappel more than 30 to 35 meters (roughly 100 to 115 feet)聽at a time (or half the length of one rope), you need to bring along another rope. But a second rope adds weight, and when you鈥檙e committing to big days in high mountains, extra pounds matter.聽

, a聽new detachable anchor system聽from French climbing-gear manufacturer Beal, could solve that problem, allowing you to rappel the full length of a single rope, then retrieve the rope by pulling on it a certain way聽and keep descending. Weighing in at 3.2 ounces and packing down to the size of a beer can, the device seemingly offers a weight-saving solution. But聽while making it possible for climbers to get to the ground with fewer rappels and thus descend faster, the mechanism it uses could prove risky and make rappelling more dangerous. We tested it out to see if the pros outweigh the cons.

How It Works

(Courtesy Beal)

The design of the Escaper is simple but brilliant. There鈥檚 a four-foot section of dry-treated dynamic climbing rope with聽a Dyneema wrap, a bungee cord, and an attachment loop at the bottom. Thread the end of the Escaper through the anchor and then all the way down through the Dyneema wrap, which resembles a friction hitch. Tie聽your main rope to the attachment loop below the Dyneema wrap. As with a聽, pulling on the Dyneema wrap (or, in this case, weighting it for rappel)聽causes it to tighten, effectively locking it in place. The rappeller can then descend.聽

(Courtesy Beal)

Once on the ground, it鈥檚 time to get your rope back. Pulling and releasing the rope sharply causes the bungee to stretch and then spring back up, moving the Dyneema wrap along with it. With each pull and release, the Dyneema wrap聽inches down the Escaper rope. Yank the rope enough times (Beal says it takes a minimum of eight, but in our testing it was closer to 12)聽and the friction hitch inches right off the end of the Escaper. The device鈥檚 rope segment slides through the anchors, and the Escaper and climbing rope fall to where you can retrieve them.

Beal isn鈥檛 just marketing this as an emergency tool; the company envisions it as a tool for competent climbers familiar with the terrain to routinely make full-length, single-rope rappels, lightening their packs and getting to the ground faster.聽鈥淭he name is Escaper, so it is聽first a backup device,鈥 says聽a Beal representative. 鈥淏ut when you know the routes, you can use the Escaper as a standard way to rappel with a聽single rope. So聽it鈥檚 a back-up system, but not only a backup system.鈥

Why It Might Be Dangerous

(Courtesy Beal)

Holding a聽Rappel

The device is designed to come unattached after a rappel, which raises the question: Could that happen聽during a rappel? Rappels are rarely straight or free-hanging. Climbers will likely unweight or partially unweight the rope as they come聽to ledges or bulges. Theoretically, unweighting the rope mid-rappel could mimic the yanking and releasing action that makes the Escaper inch over itself and ultimately release. In the instruction manual, Beal requires a consistent weight of ten kilograms聽(22 pounds) to keep the bungee taught, but how do you know if you鈥檙e exerting the minimum聽amount of force on the device to keep it engaged?

Asked whether unweighting the rope could mimic the pull-release motion of rope retrieval, the Beal representative聽says, 鈥淚t is possible, which is why we say you need to maintain ten kilograms of weight on the rope.鈥

But the representative adds that 鈥渢he pull and release actions聽are very active movements,鈥 meaning that they should be quicker and more forceful聽than those used when unweighting the rope during a rappel.

Backing It Up

Beal recommends using a backup knot and a testing system for each rappel: fix the Escaper with a knot at the end of the rope segment and send your partner down while you stay at the anchors to make sure that the friction hitch 诲辞别蝉苍鈥檛 move during rappel and does move when yanked for retrieval. Then you can remove聽the knot and rap聽down. This requires communication between you and your partner, which isn鈥檛 always possible. Consider this situation: You notice聽a problem during your partner's rappel, but your partner is now 200 feet below and out of earshot. What are you聽to do?

With respect to that scenario, the Beal representative聽says that the Escaper isn鈥檛 any different from a typical two-rope rappel. 鈥淲hat can you do when you rappel with your two strands of half rope and the knot is stuck somewhere?鈥 he asks. 鈥淭he Escaper is as efficient as any other method to rappel down.鈥

(Courtesy Beal)

Rope Retrieval

Will you reliably be able to retrieve your rope after you rappel in all conditions?聽Testing the Escaper as a demo on a trade-show floor鈥攁s Ed Crothers, who directs聽the 聽climbing-instructor program, did鈥攚ent smoothly. But that was under ideal conditions. 鈥淚t was in a free-hanging, vertical orientation, attached to an eyebolt, which nearly eliminates the friction that would be found in many climbing situations,” Crothers says. 鈥淚 still have a lot of questions.鈥

For instance: What happens when you factor in the weight of a full 60- or 70-meter rope or a wet rope? What if the rope runs over聽ledges, cracks, or聽slabs, causing friction? In the field, yanking your rope won't always be聽as easy as it is in a聽demo situation鈥攁nd if you鈥檙e more than one rope length off the ground, getting your rope back is essential.

Our Test

Our team of testers鈥攎e and several experienced climbers and canyoneers, including Spencer McBride, a guide in Zion National Park鈥攗sed this device in several situations: on a test聽anchor at chest height, on single-pitch climbs, and on multi-pitch climbs聽with one big rappel to the ground.聽In all these situations, the rope ran straight,聽with few聽ledges聽and little contact with the rock, and the Escaper performed perfectly, staying put during rappel and coming free after about a dozen harsh tugs from the ground. However, we couldn't mimic a long, jerky rappel, weighting and unweighting the rope, without abandoning our backup protocol, which none of us felt comfortable doing.

As for retrieving the rope after rappel, we found that pulling a 70-meter rope with the added resistance of the Escaper聽was quite similar to pulling the added weight of a second聽70-meter rope聽on a standard double-rope rappel. The biggest difficulty for me was getting the snap of the pull-release motion, especially with more than half the rope out. It requires a powerful, coordinated, full-body motion at odds with聽the slow and controlled method of pulling ropes in a standard rappel. 聽

The Upshot

The Escaper isn鈥檛 the first device of its kind. In the late fifties, French climber and inventor Pierre Allain created the Decrocheur Allain, a metal device with a spring-loaded hook that popped off the anchor as soon as it was unweighted. It never caught on. A similar approach involves hooking a standard piece of aid-climbing gear called a fifi hook to the anchor鈥攊t, too, requires consistent weight during the entire rappel. Some climbing guides use a special聽rope hitch that comes undone with a few pulls, but it has resulted in at least one death.

The Escaper is the first device designed to聽allow the user to unweight the rope multiple times before it releases. And聽unlike similar tools and tricks, Beal is claiming it isn鈥檛 just a last-ditch聽emergency device. As the Beal representative聽says, Beal wants the Escaper to become a regular part of the experienced climber鈥檚 kit.

For Ron Funderburke, education director at the , it鈥檚 the lack of certain caveats and concerns in Beal鈥檚 instruction manual聽that are the cause skepticism. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 mention icy conditions. They don鈥檛 mention vegetated or loose terrain, where the Escaper could dislodge debris or get stuck,鈥 he says. 鈥淎re we to believe that none of these circumstances impose conditions on the Escaper鈥檚 use?鈥 (Though as the Beal representative聽told聽国产吃瓜黑料, 鈥淏eal feels like they covered this in their product-use guidelines,鈥 pointing to a bullet in the instruction manual聽that warns that “in wet or icy conditions the system will become more susceptible to abrasion and lose strength.鈥)

With the device so new聽and testing limited, it鈥檚 nearly impossible to answer many of these safety concerns right now. In the meantime, most of the professionals we spoke with encourage climbers and canyoneers to think of the Escaper as an emergency-only device聽rather than a replacement for a conventional rappelling setup. More important, they emphasize that only advanced and experienced climbers should use it.

鈥淚n the hands of the unaware or incompetent, this device could be deadly,鈥 Crothers says. 鈥淏ut if over time it proves itself to be a viable, versatile tool, then it could be a game changer.鈥

Lead Photo: Julie Ellison

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