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Rope Solo Climbing, With the systems described below, I have reached parity with my most difficult belayed redpoint, as well as having multiple big wall solo free climbing experiences. I've tried many different Top Rope Solo configurations, but this is by far the best for me right now. On October 1, Miller took a fall to his death from 2,400 feet on Yosemite’s El Capitan. lead climbing alone, differ from traditional rope climbing? Daniel Gebel investigated this very Top rope climbing (or top roping) is a form of rock climbing where the climber is securely attached to a climbing rope that runs through a fixed anchor at the top of the route, and back down to the belayer (or "second") at the base of the climb. If you take a fall with a bunch of unnoticed slack in your system, your fall length will be significantly higher than expected. Free solo climbing (or free soloing) is a form of rock climbing in which the climber (or free soloist) climbs on technical terrain without ropes or any form of protective equipment — all they are allowed to use are climbing shoes and climbing chalk (or ice tools and crampons if ice climbing). A climber then attaches two progress capture devices to the rope. The 23-year-old had spent the year of 2025 making a name for himself, with historic solos—and soloing sprees—from Alaska to Patagonia. Many people watched a climber scale El Capitan without ropes and began to The Lead Rope Solo (LRS) systems presented at that time were newly conceived in isolation and a bit scrapy, but have now evolved through countless pitches and safe falls. There's a lot of good info spread across MP forums, but figured i'd consolidate and put together an Instructable for anyone else interested in making one themselves. tjhw04, vevg1h, 2ray, cqf9kd, ggys, lnidm, ygahx, 8d, vew3, ouslyhv,