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My 1st SKYDIVE - • My 1st Jump - Skydive Toronto - Tandem My friend Paul and I were invited to rappel down a 12 storey building in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada on May 9th, 2012. We had a blast and there were no casualties :) Now I want to rappel down something taller. Ken Domik KBDProductionsTV YouTube - / kbdproductionstv Twitter - http://twitter.com/#!/@kendomik FaceBook - / 162219386763 Google+ - https://plus.google.com/1131371943345... Music by Kevin MacLeod http://incompetech.com/m/c/royalty-free/ I have a Creative Commons License with Kevin MacLeod and have the rights to use the music in this video. Creative Commons License for Kevin MacLeod, Link... http://creativecommons.org/licenses/b... Ropocolypse 2: ISRC: US-UAN-11-00810 Abseiling - Rappelling - Rappel From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abseiling A time-lapse panorama of a rock climber abseiling off a climb. Abseiling ( /ˈæbseɪl/ or /ˈɑːpzaɪl/; from German: abseilen meaning "to rope down"), rappelling in American English,[1] is the controlled descent down a rock face using a rope; climbers use this technique when a cliff or slope is too steep and/or dangerous to descend without protection. Slang terms Slang terms for the technique include: rapping or rap jumping (American slang), deepelling (Canadian slang), abbing (British slang for "abseiling"), rappling (Hindi slang). The term rappel / rappelling is derived from the French language: French, recall, return, rappel, from Old French, recall, from rappeler, to recall: re-, re- + appeler, to summon. History The origin of the abseil is attributed[2] to Jean Charlet-Straton, a Chamonix guide who lived from 1840--1925. Charlet originally devised the technique of the abseil method of roping down during a failed solo attempt of Petit Dru in 1876. After many attempts, some of them solo, he managed to reach the summit of the Petit Dru in 1879 in the company of two other Chamonix guides, Prosper Payot and Frédéric Folliguet, whom he hired. During that ascent, Charlet perfected the abseil. Equipment Ropes: Climbers often simply use their climbing ropes for abseiling. For many other applications, low-stretch rope (typically ~2% stretch when under the load of a typical bodyweight) called static rope is used to reduce bouncing and to allow easier ascending of the rope. Anchors for abseiling are sometimes made with trees or boulders, using webbing and cordellete, or also with rock climbing equipment, such as nuts, hexes and spring-loaded camming devices.[3] Some climbing areas have fixed anchors for rappelling. A descender or rappel device is a friction device or friction hitch that allows rope to be paid out in a controlled fashion, under load, with a minimal effort by the person controlling it. The speed at which the abseiler descends is controlled by applying greater or lesser force on the rope below the device or altering the angle at which the rope exits the device. Descenders can be task-designed or improvised from other equipment. Mechanical descenders include braking bars, the figure eight, the abseil rack, the "bobbin" (and its self-locking variant the "stop"), the gold tail, and the "sky genie" used by some window-washers and wildfire firefighters. Some improvised descenders include the Munter hitch, a carabiner wrap, the basic crossed-carabiner brake and the piton bar brake (sometimes called the carabiner and piton). There is an older, more uncomfortable, method of wrapping the rope around one's body for friction instead of using a descender, as in the Dulfersitz or Geneva methods used by climbers in the 1960s.