Speed/Impact FAQs
Is the maximum descent speed of the DEUS 3100 affected by weight?
How is descent controlled?
Do I need to be concerned about the DEUS 3100 getting hot during descent?
Is the maximum descent speed of the DEUS 3100 affected by weight? No.
Within the safe working load limits of the DEUS 3100 (300
lbs), the maximum descent speed is limited by the internal centrifugal
brake to about 3 meters per seconds.
How is descent speed controlled? Descent
speed is controlled using two of the four braking systems
in the DEUS 3100. First, turning the control
knob between "engaged" and "disengaged" changes the setting of the disk brake which
controls descent speed. Turn the control knob toward
stop to go slower; turn it toward full open to
go faster.
Second, regardless of how the disk brake is set
using the control knob, the manual brake can be used
to control descent speed. The manual brake is very
simple
to use: just hold the free end of the rope in your
gloved hand and pull the rope away from the descent device.
The harder you pull, the more braking effect. The
manual brake can be used to completely stop descent
even if the control knob for the brake is turned
all the way toward full open.
The beauty and safety of the DEUS 3100 braking system is its four independent brakes.
The first brake (the fixed-path, hands-free figure
8) keeps the rope under control and backs up the centrifugal brake to guard against free-fall. The second
brake (the disk brake) can be used to adjust descent
speed from zero to up to about 3 meters per second hands-free. The third brake
(the centrifugal brake) limits maximum descent speed
to about 3 meters per second and guards against free-fall. The fourth brake
(the manual brake) can be used to manually control
descent speed between "complete stop" and a maximum
of about 3 meters per second.
Do I need to be concerned about the DEUS 3100 getting hot during descent? While
heat is an unavoidable consequence of controlled
descent, the DEUS 3100 and our Fire Ropes have been designed to handle it. Two of the
four redundant brakes in the DEUS 3100 work without putting friction on the rope. And, the DEUS 3100 is durable so it can absorb a lot
of heat before getting hot. Read
about heat in the "descent" section
of the DEUS Vertical Rescue System Instruction
Manual. Then, contact a DEUS Certified
Trainer for specific instruction on ways
to manage heat during long descents.
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