|
Post by joekr07 on Aug 14, 2015 1:39:54 GMT -7
I have always been a bit annnoyed that hangboarding is much more quantifiable and that loads can be incremented in smaller portions between workputs than campusing. Adding more weight when campusing, seems to be a reciepe for elbow, shoulder and ligament disaster, so ruling out that option it seems to me that campusing would be a bit more quantifiable if one could set the rung spacing in smaller increments. For example, on a traditional campus board with moon spacing going from 1-4-7 to 1-4-8 or similar is a pretty big step! It would arguably be much better if we could do 1-4-7 and then next workout go to 1-4-7,1 etc. What would be needed for this is a simple setup where the rungs can be slided along the board vertically and fixed with some wing nut or similar. Anyone seen something like this anywhere?!
|
|
|
Post by Chris W on Aug 14, 2015 5:13:54 GMT -7
Joe, I built my board with moon spacing but I have rungs in place for half spacing as well. That way, you can go from 1,4,7 to 1,4,7.5
Or, in my case, 1,3,4.5
|
|
|
Post by MarkAnderson on Aug 14, 2015 6:27:54 GMT -7
I've only seen such a thing in my dreams. I know, my dreams are sick. I like the wingnut idea.
|
|
|
Post by Will S on Aug 14, 2015 7:10:22 GMT -7
Wingnuts and slots sounds like a recipe for off-level rungs and rungs slipping/creeping from where you set them.
Maybe a series of mounting holes spaced every 2" or so, sort of like the grid layout on a moon board would work.
|
|
|
Post by Otis. on Aug 14, 2015 7:15:10 GMT -7
I also have 1/2 spacing and it has worked for me. With that said, I could see using a series of T-nuts every few inches and and drilling out a few campus rungs for martini bolts and using that for variable spacing. I would have reservations about deadpointing to a rung on a slide only held there by a wing nut. Seems like a recipe for injury.
|
|
|
Post by joshvillen on Aug 18, 2015 8:05:29 GMT -7
Wingnuts and slots sounds like a recipe for off-level rungs and rungs slipping/creeping from where you set them. Maybe a series of mounting holes spaced every 2" or so, sort of like the grid layout on a moon board would work. That guy who duplicated action direct inside, has mounting holes and pegs so he can move holds around as need be, looked surprisingly stable
|
|