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CAMP Tricam Nylon Sling 0.5

Nylon 0.5

Rating

My vote: None ( 5.3 avg )

Description

  • Two placement modes: active cam and passive chock
  • Works where nothing else can fit, such as solution pockets
  • Excellent in horizontal cracks
  • Stiffer sewing on the slings of sizes 0.125 – 2.0 for easier one-handed placement and extraction

Look on the rack of most experienced trad climbers and you are almost certain to see an assortment of Tricams. Most climbers agree that visiting the Gunks without multiples of pink through purple is a serious mistake. These wondrous pieces of pro can be used either as cams or nuts and often work where nothing else fits. Tricams are ideal in horizontal cracks, pockets, and shallow vertical cracks. The larger sizes are an affordable way to augment a rack of cams and are ideal for belay anchors due to their high strength and light weight. Tricams can also be placed in icy cracks where regular cams do not work.
Our engineers recently spent some time working on one of the age-old questions with the Tricam … how to stiffen the sling without impeding its ability to engage the camming action. After much experimenting, we rested on the simple solution of carrying the inner band of webbing further towards the head and using a stitch pattern. The result is a naturally stiffer sling that makes one-handed placements easier, but still engages the cam in active mode and will even increase durability over sharp edges with the additional layer of material.

Retail price

US$ 29.95

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Award Image
Weight (grams / ounces) 30 g / 1.10 oz
Size .5
Sling Material(s) Nylon / Polyamide
Color Pink
Range (inches / millimeters) 0.71 in - 1.06 in
18.00 mm - 27.00 mm
Strength (kilonewtons) Cam:      9 kN
Chock:   7 kN
3Chock: 0 kN
Certification CE, UIAA
AVG RATING
6
( 6 avg )
Rating
6
( 6 avg )

It's not a Gunks climb if you don't sink the pink.

Pros
Sturdier than SLCDs in horizontals due to nylon flexibility.
Good for "ragged" cracks, which give poor surface area to SLCDs but lots of features for the tricam fulcrum to catch on.
Very wide range.
Fits in extremely common features in the Gunks.
Sense of joy and pride.
Cons
Can be hard to extract from the wall.
Familiarity
I’ve used it a ton

I just obtained a third one of these because I regularly place two on a climb, and then find a third placement and wish I had a third. They're light, they're tough, they're pink, they're easy to use, and they keep you safe. What's not to like?

I just obtained a third one of these because I regularly place two on a climb, and then find a third placement and wish I had a third. They're light, they're tough, they're pink, they're easy to use, and they keep you safe. What's not to like?

Climbing Report Gear Review no rating given just a review

CAMP has some really great, versatile, rock protection that you can add to your rack for not a lot of money and not a lot of weight. It has made our climbing more fun and safe, and frankly made it possible to get up the Finger of Fate, which I don’t think would have been possible otherwise.

Climbing Gear Review Tricams 101: A Guide to Using/Placing Tricams

Designed by Greg Lowe in the 1970s, Tricams first appeared on racks in the early 1980s. While the original unit had two placements (one passive, one active), the newest generation (CAMP Tricam EVO) has three: a cam, a nut, and a nut in broadside-out mode. The biggest benefit? The Tricam often fits where nothing else will, such as horizontal cracks, solution holes, pockets, pods, and flares large enough to require a cam-sized piece, but too narrow for a typical SLCD. See all the placement options and tips when you read the full article.

Tricams