Two Walt Shipley-made cams on ebay

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Messages 1 - 138 of total 138 in this topic
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Original Post - Mar 17, 2009 - 09:58pm PT
Two of [url="http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=280323753036&ssPageName=ADME:X:RTQ:US:1123" target="new"]Walt's cams[/url] are up on ebay and I intend to purchase them for the Yosemite Climbing Museum - I'd appreciate you folks not bidding against me in the effort to do that.

Thanks...!

-Joseph
zip

Trad climber
pacific beach, ca
Mar 17, 2009 - 10:07pm PT
joseph,

why don't you just e mail seller, and tell him/her your intentions, and see if they will give them to you, or give you a low, buy now price.
climbrunride

Trad climber
Durango, CO
Mar 17, 2009 - 10:08pm PT
Cool stuff. I'd like to have them for my collection, but you have a much better cause. I'll be a good boy and leave them alone.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 17, 2009 - 10:31pm PT
Zip, I did and if the seller didn't need the cash he wouldn't be selling them at all as he bought them from Walt and they clearly mean something to him. I'm just trying to work with him in that regard to secure them for the YCM as they seem like something that belong in the Valley. Normally I'd be getting them for Stephane's Nut Museum given he's the one that alerted me to them - but this is one of those rare cases where they really probably belong in YCM more than in Stephane's, Marty's or anyone else's private collection.

climbrunride - I appreciate that...
Clint Cummins

Trad climber
SF Bay area, CA
Mar 17, 2009 - 10:34pm PT
Rob Oravetz made similar cams. Are you sure Walt made those?
zip

Trad climber
pacific beach, ca
Mar 17, 2009 - 10:35pm PT
any idea on how much he wants for them?
Jaybro

Social climber
wuz real!
Mar 17, 2009 - 10:37pm PT
I pity da fool who bids against Joe...
zip

Trad climber
pacific beach, ca
Mar 17, 2009 - 10:44pm PT
i contacted seller and asked him if he had a buy now price, and proof that it was made by Walt.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 17, 2009 - 11:01pm PT
Zip (and Clint), to be honest, I don't think that was really necessary at all. He says Walt made and sold them to him, I'm willing to believe him. Can you or anyone verify they were made by someone else? Otherwise I'm inclined to take him at his word given the other gear he's selling...

Clint, I'm not familiar with Rob Oravetz - got some details? I could be wrong, but I would think a couple of Walt's cams, regardless of who made them, would be a nice addition to the YCM.
Jaybro

Social climber
wuz real!
Mar 17, 2009 - 11:08pm PT
I believe Rob O lives in Berkeley. Bachar said he saw him at that Oakland slide show, I didn't recognize him (wasn't looking) through the years since I last saw him.
johntp

Trad climber
socal
Mar 17, 2009 - 11:13pm PT
Hey-

Great effort. Never knew Walt, but heard some great stories and know people that hold him close. We need to keep the cams home. If there is anything I can do to help, including financial support, count me in. jtpbka at aol . com. 310 - 351 - 1472.
Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Mar 17, 2009 - 11:32pm PT
I had forgotten that either Walt or Rob made cams.
We are all nearly "history" now...

Joseph,
I just e-mailed you Rob's contact.
couchmaster

climber
Mar 17, 2009 - 11:36pm PT
Nice of you JH - this is a thanks for the heads up bump.
mastadon

Trad climber
quaking has-been
Mar 17, 2009 - 11:36pm PT

I've got a "Rob" cam that I took a mighty fall on in The Trench. It held and I'm still able to post here. It's a lot shorter then those cams on ebay.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 18, 2009 - 12:25am PT
Mastadon, could you post up a pic of Rob's cam?

Thanks Tar (and Bill! And johntp)...
Anastasia

climber
Not here
Mar 18, 2009 - 12:31am PT
Bump...
Everyone here is staying away from them. I do hope they make it to the museum!
AF
mastadon

Trad climber
quaking has-been
Mar 18, 2009 - 12:33am PT
10/4, but prolly not today. I'll have to dig it out.....

The cam lobes on my "Rob" cam aren't serrated like the ones listed on ebay.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 18, 2009 - 12:39am PT
Thanks Anastasia!

Clint, courtesy of Tar, I just fired off an email to Rob and asked if he couldn't take a look at them (and also tell us the story of his own cams).
WBraun

climber
Mar 18, 2009 - 12:44am PT
This story sounds so bogus. 15 years ago.

He went to Fresno State and I first met Walt when he left Lockheed.

That was more than 15 years ago. He never mentioned making any cams unless he made them at Middendorfs place?

John? Russ? ........what do you guys know.
Jaybro

Social climber
wuz real!
Mar 18, 2009 - 12:53am PT
I don't remember Walt ever talking about making Cams. Though he could/would have if he was so inclined...
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 18, 2009 - 12:56am PT
Sounds like we need to get John on the line here...
WBraun

climber
Mar 18, 2009 - 01:10am PT
Joe

The seller said Walt made them in college. So, they never could have been made at Middendorfs. Walt did not know John M in college.

The sellers story sounds way hokey. But ...

They could have been made by Rob and the guy though Walt made them.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 18, 2009 - 01:20am PT
Thanks Werner, maybe Rob will take a look and let us know. I'm pretty confident they were Walt's regardless who made them and I would think that's enough to make them worth sending to Ken. You guys who knew him would of course be a better judge of that than me...
mastadon

Trad climber
quaking has-been
Mar 18, 2009 - 01:45am PT

Ok. Ok. Here's the "Rob" cam I have.

healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 18, 2009 - 01:47am PT
Thanks Mastadon, that will probably greatly help folks who might know these sorts of things.


They certainly have a derivative appearance even with a bunch of differences like sloped vs. angled stem tapers, square vs. rounded stem base, smooth vs. grooved cam lobes, and the obvious length differences. I also notice the trigger bars on both are quite long.
deuce4

climber
Hobart, Australia
Mar 18, 2009 - 02:10am PT
Just back from an internet lapse (moved to another place outside of Hobart)...

Walt must have graduated from college around 1980? Not entirely sure of the year.

I don't think Walt made those cams. They look like some of the early cams available in Yosemite in the early 80's, perhaps HB's (Horsham Bruce from Australia)? Or Orovitz, perhaps. I had one of those .5's at one point myself. They were highly coveted prior to the arrival of 3-cam units.

I'm not 100% certain that Walt didn't make them, but it sure seems like he would have let us (folks like Werner, Russ, and me) know if he had made some cams in college. Plus since those are the same design as the ones that were noted, and remembered, as new and innovative in the early 80's, it seems pretty certain that Walt would have mentioned that he had designed the tapered shaft prior to the HB (or Orovitz) models, if he had done so.

But the clincher for me is the fact that Walt was very particular about his gear. Once, while gripped out of my gourd on our ascent of Zenyatta, I mashed into mincemeat one of his knifeblades into a shallow bottoming thin crack (before birdbeaks, you see). He was very upset about it. I personally can't imagine him parting with cams that he had actually made himself, unless it was a gift to a close friend.

Who's the guy selling them? Hy Sorens or Dave Ingersol, I would believe either of those two. Otherwise, the claim needs further proof, methinks.

Walt helped me in my A5 shop in Flagstaff in 1989, right after he had his extraordinary solo stint in Redrocks. We worked on a solo device, he helped with my portaledge corner manufacturing, he built a jig for the birdbeak, and he helped make a bunch of hammers. But not cams. (We also climbed a bunch of cool desert towers in those few months). There were plenty of great small cams available in the late 80's so it would have been pointless to make your own, and certainly not a rigid shaft model.



KP Ariza

climber
SCC
Mar 18, 2009 - 02:11am PT
God rest his soul. Walt was the man of course but even if he did make these cams WTF are they doing on Ebay? The whole thing seems cheap to me. Oooo Ooo look, I have Walts cams. BFD
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 18, 2009 - 02:25am PT
Thanks for taking a look John. Kenny, I traded ebay messages with the seller and he seems completely authentic to me. I'll point him to this thread and maybe he would be willing to shed some more light on things. Here's his response to my first ebay message where I mention these probably belong in the YCM...

=

Dear healyje,

Joseph,
I was just telling my wife the same thing last night. I think the AAC has a museum. I didnt know they had one in the valley even though I have spent many summers there. I actually felt pretty guilty putting them on ebay but the bills are piling up.

 xxxxxxxxxx
bhilden

Trad climber
Mountain View, CA
Mar 18, 2009 - 04:03am PT
I purchased a couple of cams from Rob Oravitz when he came through Boulder in about 1984 or so. They looked just like the one in Don's photo. Maybe Walt copied Rob's design as the stem in both look very similar though the length differs(well, duh).

Bruce
Clint Cummins

Trad climber
SF Bay area, CA
Mar 18, 2009 - 04:23am PT
Joseph,

The seller could certainly be honest about having bought them from Walt. If that is enough for you to be interested, that's up to you. I don't know what criteria Ken uses for gear to be interesting to the museum.

I am more interested in exactly who made or designed them, if they are well made which the ebay cams appear to be. (I'm not interested in collecting these, so I won't bid against you!)

As John explained, there were several people who made small cams in the late 80s prior to the arrival of TCUs. Various people were selling them in Camp 4. I have seen at least 6 different designs. Some were quite nicely made and others were crude (Rob Oravetz's were pretty nice).

I have seen the short shafted ones with smooth cam surfaces like Don's photo above. We used some on the Shield in 4/1987.

The Rob Oravetz cams I have used most recently are in Brian Cox's collection; I have taken them to Indian Creek a couple of times. They have longer shafts than Don's, but I will have to arrange with Brian to get photos if there is interest. As I recall, these cam surfaces were notched and similar to the ones on ebay. Brian refers to them as definitely being from Rob Oravetz.

Brian also has HB cams from that time. They have titanium (or maybe steel) shafts, which have a smaller cross section than the aluminum shaft cams on ebay.

I have a crudely made small cam which my partner bought from some Mexicans in Camp 4 in 5/1985. It was handy for the Salathe', but has been mostly retired since TCUs arrived.

There is also the Wild Country #.5 with titanium or steel shaft; I am not counting it in the 6 above.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 18, 2009 - 04:40am PT
Clint, as a longtime stateside buyer for Stephane I was just trying to intervene to insure these don't disappear into the void without some opportunity for you folks to decide what they're about. It's certainly more for you guys and Ken to decide whether these have intrinsic value for having been associated with Walt or even possibly made by him such that you'd all like to have them returned to the Valley.

I don't really attach much in the way of any sentimentality to gear (certainly my own, anyway) but do recognize if someone doesn't collect some of this stuff we'll lose a bunch of our collective history. I certainly don't have the inclination or temperment to do it, but I'm sure glad guys like Stephane, Marty, Ken, and Gary do.

If Ken isn't interested in them, then if I got them, I'd ship them off to Stephane who is and who let me know about them in the first place (I sent him a link to this thread as well...).

[ Edit: Just sent Marty a link to the thread as well... ]
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 18, 2009 - 04:48am PT
I'm anticipating they'll likely go for substantially more than that - I'm just asking folks here to either not bid against me or let me know some other plan so I can back off. I'm just a working stiff with a family like anyone else - not made of money...
zip

Trad climber
pacific beach, ca
Mar 18, 2009 - 06:57am PT
Joe,

i contacted seller and asked him if he had a buy now price, and if he had any proof that these were made by Walt.

he said no on the buy now price.

he also stated that he did not have any proof that these were made by Walt. he said that Walt made them at the University of Santa Barbara. He was taking engineering at the time. his roommate was Dave Ingersoll. He worked with Walt on on a few remodel jobs in Sacramento, and said that he was excellent carpenter.

Joe, i wasn't trying to be a jerk, or step on your toes when contacting seller. i have bought a ton of stuff on the Internet, and never been burned, but i ask a lot of questions from sellers, and do my research.

i also thought if i offered him enough of a buy now price, you wouldn't have to be concerned about bidding. if he accepted my offer, i would have given you the cams for the museum.

Zip
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Mar 18, 2009 - 11:54am PT
Those aren't the cams I was making at the time. I knew Walt pretty well back then, we hung out a bit and even did a route at the base of halfdome that I don't think was ever published. I don't recall him ever mentioning that he made cams and you'd think he would have, if you knew Walt, given mine were all over the place.
nature

climber
Tucson, AZ
Mar 18, 2009 - 12:01pm PT
is Dave Ingersoll still around? IF so does anyone know how to contact him? Seems like if Walt made those while he was his room mate Dave would remember(?).

interesting piece of history no matter how it plays out...
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 18, 2009 - 12:43pm PT
Zip, don't get me wrong, I don't care if someone else gets them and gives Ken and folks here a chance to consider them - I just don't want to run it up so high my family is then out of pocket a large sum unnecessarily. As for the part about contacting the seller, I was merely saying they seemed authentic and honest from the perspective of my ebay experience buying gear for Stephane. In fact, the seller is a good machinist himself making and selling a custom product no differently than early cam makers. I suspect he could easily have made cams back in the day as well as anyone.

I'm the first to admit I operate on gut instinct on these matters and am inclined to take people at their word, as far as the digging into the fine details of what and whom - I'm curious, but tend to leave that to Stephane and Marty given they're so good at it. So, no problem on my part, I think we're all just trying to sort this one out.

FTOR - I'm guessing you're Rob - thanks for stopping by...
Nefarius

Big Wall climber
Fresno
Mar 18, 2009 - 12:48pm PT
Regardless, unless people from here start bidding it up, I doubt the bid will go very high on these. Less than $50, easy.
WBraun

climber
Mar 18, 2009 - 01:23pm PT
I just remembered something (eureka! I have memory?).

Anyways I remember Walt having this POS looking cams like the ones being sold and they were trashed and we fixed em.

Might be these .....?

Why would anyone want to buy this sh'it is beyond me.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 18, 2009 - 01:34pm PT
There you have it I suppose, I'll wait for Ken, but again, if no one from the Valley is really interested in these I'll pass them on, probably one to Stephane and one to Marty...
rich sims

Trad climber
co
Mar 18, 2009 - 03:41pm PT
Leroy
I thought you were selling them in the parking lot,yes no?
81-82ish
Rich
scuffy b

climber
just below the San Andreas
Mar 18, 2009 - 04:47pm PT
I got a couple from Rob. They look like Mastadons, but I don't
remember the exact shape of the base of the stem.
I got 1/2" and 3/4".
For a while they seemed to be the only tiny cams around.
Rob was making them with Dave Altman and Eben, whose last name
I can't remember.
Eben's shop is where they were made. I'm pretty sure all three
were making the cams, but maybe only Rob made enough extras to
sell.
Altman referred to them as "Associates", I guess because they
were "not quite Friends."

Rob occasionally posts here.
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Mar 18, 2009 - 05:12pm PT
yeah, posted earlier on this. all true. at some point if there's any interest maybe it would make more sense to start an early small cam historical thread. -rob
zip

Trad climber
pacific beach, ca
Mar 18, 2009 - 10:19pm PT
Joe,

seller has offered to donate cams to museum for cost of shipping.
Mungeclimber

Trad climber
sorry, just posting out loud.
Mar 18, 2009 - 10:32pm PT
man, I'm never selling my old gear if I need some scratch. it'll get pwned by the tacos.

;)
dickcilley

Social climber
A cova Dos Nenos
Mar 19, 2009 - 10:35am PT
Walt didnt make them.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 19, 2009 - 10:42am PT
Zip, yes I've been in email contact with him as well, thanks. He tried to register to post on the thread but didn't get a verification email. I've got an email into Randy to see if we can't get him an account.
Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Mar 19, 2009 - 10:58am PT
I can get word to Dave Ingersoll and see what he remembers.
zip

Trad climber
pacific beach, ca
Mar 19, 2009 - 11:02am PT
Dick,

How do you know this?

I talked with him on phone last night for a fair amount of time, and I am inclined to believe that he did in fact purchase these from Walt.
zip

Trad climber
pacific beach, ca
Mar 19, 2009 - 11:07am PT
Randy told me that he originally purchased 3 from dave. He later asked dave for 2 more, and dave directed him to walt, who sold him the other 2.

healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 19, 2009 - 11:46am PT
From the seller:

I created an account on supertopo but never got my email confirmation as I wanted to respond (jh: RJ has fixed this for him).

I actually bought 3 of the same cams from Dave Ingersol but sold them in the valley for gas money to get home. The 2 on ebay I bought from Walt. I was doing some work for Dave and he told me Walt made them in college. Walt was standing there when Dave stated this and didnt say anything. So I had no reason to doubt this. Last time I talked to Dave he had just had a terrible accident soloing. He was trying to cross a glacier in tennis shoes and slipped and took a long fall. I guess he was broken up pretty bad. But on the bright side he married Stephanie and is still in Colorado.I have been trying to find him. He has a company called Park West Real estate. Same name as it was when he was in Sacto. Please let me know if anyone finds him, as I would like to talk to him. If you send me an email I can send a picture of what happens to these cams from a fall when placed horizontally.Not pretty.

[Note: I'm not posting up his name or contact info, but rather going to let him do that...]
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Mar 19, 2009 - 11:47am PT
my post may have been misunderstood, i meant true, to the previous post, about my building 'associates' with dave and eben. my opinion is that walt didn't make these cams. no way.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 19, 2009 - 12:13pm PT
Rob, again, my interactions with the seller, and his own career as an artisan machinist leaves me zero reason to doubt his post above. If Walt were standing there when it was said and didn't say anything, how would you interpret things? I don't have any idea what the reality behind that particular exchange might have been, but I get no sense whatsoever the the seller is being anything but forthright and honest about his experience in the matter.
zip

Trad climber
pacific beach, ca
Mar 19, 2009 - 12:33pm PT
Ditto
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Mar 19, 2009 - 01:25pm PT
i was making these small cams around '83 - '85. there were no small cams of this design prior to that, so when was walt in school? these cams are clearly knock-offs. i do recall seeing cams like these back then that were based on our designs that were being mass produced by someone in LA.
deuce4

climber
Hobart, Australia
Mar 19, 2009 - 05:18pm PT
Rob, I reckon you're the man to start the Small Cam Historical Thread. Very interesting stuff.

For reference, I recall 1980 being the first year you could buy Jardine's Freinds in the US. I bought my first set (full sizes only #1-3) mail order from the UK. It was when I was a student at Dartmouth, so it would have been 1979 or early 1980.

Now that you mention it, I do remember yours --Rob Orovitz--being the first well made small cams available. 1983 sounds like the year. Before that there weren't really any decent small cams available for purchase (in Camp 4), though there were a few homemade ones out there. Your's were very expensive, if I remember right! I couldn't afford it, though I wanted one badly!

I actually made a small cam myself in college, must have been around 1981 at Stanford. I still have the blueprints, but the unit itself didn't work that well, as I messed up the placement of the trigger wires on the cam. I gave it away at some point.

Looking through my old notes, I came across this letter and sketch of a logarithmic spiral from Walt. Here it is, front and back:


Russ Walling

Social climber
Upper Fupa, North Dakota
Mar 19, 2009 - 05:23pm PT
^^^^^


hahahaha! "take a bath", logarithmic spirals and an onsite free solo attempt all in the same letter. Fuk! He was the man!

Side note: Hey Rob! good seeing you in the Gorge a while back. If you ever come down to Josh, you gots to look me up. I can always use a tight rope from above!
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Mar 20, 2009 - 12:06pm PT
when i have some time i'll see if i can put something together, not so sure i want to loose my lurker status here though. have to dig through some stuff to see if i can find any of the sketches or patterns we used. thanks for posting the note, lost on an onsite solo of fantasia??--good times!!
Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Mar 20, 2009 - 01:11pm PT
Nice archival stuff in there Deuce!

So as to somewhat retain Rob's lurker status, we'll use this as the unofficial small cam thread for now...
(apologies for drawing you into this Rob, but we love fidgeting over the olden days and your input is much appreciated)

I have an e-mail into Dave Ingersoll, it may not be accurate; over the weekend I'll get his number and try phoning him.
Super nice guy and really misses Walt & loves the stories so I'm pretty sure he'll be happy to accommodate.

Tony Yaniro was on to this very early and I don't remember exactly the year/date, but with a HACKSAW,
He hand cut some steel units and showed them to us with pride way back when!
'Dude was persistent...

HB cams, with slender steel stems:


Steven Amter

climber
Washington, DC
Mar 20, 2009 - 03:11pm PT
4Deuce: Nice blueprints.

I have to correct something though. Friends were available in the U.S. before 1980 - I know I was using them in 1979 and never ordered anything from overseas... We could buy them at Rock and Snow in the Gunks, and also, I believe, in places like EMS. I still have, and use some of those friends.

In fact, in the summer of 1979 my party had 2 full sets up to 4" to use in aid climbing on Mt. Thor, Baffin Is. (The big ones had not yet reached the market, but we got them special directly from the company.) This was one of the earliest such uses in wide, long cracks.

I also know that custom made small sized friends, and maybe TCUs hit the Gunks by no later than summer of 1983 - I bought some from Steve and Corey Rich, who were making them, and possibly visiting western climbers who were also making and selling them.

Steve Amter

crunch

Social climber
CO
Mar 20, 2009 - 03:37pm PT
Friends were available around the beginning of 1978, more or less. I recall they were first available in Britain.

They were slow to catch on; it took some time for climbers to understand what Friends could do.

Firstly, they were available in Britain before the US, and they were of less use in the UK as the cracks are seldom so straight-sided as in the US, so existing nuts worked quite well. They seemed to be very much a luxury item, rather than essential.

Secondly, they were expensive,

And thirdly, there had already been a few camming designs produced, and none had worked, so this led to more reluctance to fork out real money for what might have been just the latest gimmick.

Fourthly, there was no modern advertising campaign; it was a few tiny ads in the mags, and word of mouth.

Here's some more info about the early history:

http://www.wildcountry.co.uk/AboutUs/AboutUs1/History1/
bhilden

Trad climber
Mountain View, CA
Mar 20, 2009 - 04:08pm PT
Ray Jardine was selling Friends in the Valley in the spring of 1978. You could by a #1, 2 or 3 for the pricey sum of $17. The general feeling was that nobody would use them except for very special circumstances because they were so expensive.

Bruce
Harpfreak

Trad climber
California
Mar 21, 2009 - 02:41am PT
Hello all. Im the one with the cams on ebay. I didnt think they would cause so much drama. As stated, I bought several from Dave then bought 2 more later. Dave told me Walt made them in college and Walt was standing right there. He didnt deny it. I didnt ask him if he did. I had no reason to question it. Ask Dave Ingersol. If anyone has Daves contact info tell him Randy says hi or please P.M. me with it. I would love to say hi. I will give the cams to any supertopo member that wins them for free as long as they donate them to the Yosemite museum. So PLEASE bid away.In hindsite,
I would have just sent them there if I had known they were going to
be considered collectible.That was the reason I put Walts name on the listing. I didnt want them hanging on a rack and being used.
Clint Cummins

Trad climber
SF Bay area, CA
Mar 21, 2009 - 02:53am PT
Randy,

Better to end the auction than to give them to the highest bidder. Otherwise you will have to pay ebay's 2-3% on the final bid amount! (Which could be huge if the buyers do not pay and bid very high).
Harpfreak

Trad climber
California
Mar 21, 2009 - 03:19am PT
Can I end the auction without getting my ass in a sling? I would have done that days ago.Im not ebay savvy.Please enlighten me.
I will do just that if possible.Thanks! Im gonna go read ebays policies now.
Harpfreak

Trad climber
California
Mar 21, 2009 - 03:25am PT
Never mind!! DONE! Now who has a mailing address for the museum?
Thanks!
bhilden

Trad climber
Mountain View, CA
Mar 21, 2009 - 03:38am PT
Harpfreak,

I can't speak for everyone on this forum, but I think the general feeling was one of just trying to determine who made the cams for history sake. I don't think anyone was trying to say that you were trying to make a fast buck by lying about the origin of the cams.

This is really interesting stuff and I think we all just wanted to get the correct history.

Bruce
Harpfreak

Trad climber
California
Mar 21, 2009 - 04:00am PT
Im just glad they will get a good home. I looked up the museum and they have a P.O. box. Think i will just email them and let them know to watch the box.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 21, 2009 - 04:09am PT
Randy, glad to see you made it to the thread!

Like I was describing relative to Ken, Stephane, Marty, and Gary's collections - Ken's is as close as there is to a 'Yosemite Museum' and my vote would be to just ship them to him. I'll send you his email and you can get ahold of him directly.

Thanks.

-Joseph

P.S. If he ends up not really interested then I'd take them and send one to Marty and one to Stephane which would also insure they are preserved in collections that will eventually find permanent homes.
Clint Cummins

Trad climber
SF Bay area, CA
Mar 21, 2009 - 04:55am PT
> P.S. If he ends up not really interested then I'd take them and send one to Marty and one to Stephane which would also insure they are preserved in collections that will eventually find permanent homes.

In that event, a payment to Randy would be in order, as Randy's condition was that they be donated to the Yosemite museum....
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 21, 2009 - 06:10am PT
Clint,

As someone who mostly ebay proxies for Stephane (I pay, he collects [so my basement stays uncluttered and I can visit someday]) - and who also has fed gear to both Ken and Marty - I feel any of the three collections (Ken, Stephane, Marty) are essentially equivalent relative to the long term odds of them surviving intact and finding a permanent home. Ken's has the closest affinity to Yosemite and he has been getting his collection out there. Stephane and Marty extensively research all aspects of every piece of gear (and gear maker in Stephane's case) - all are looking for permanent homes, though Ken is clearly ahead on that curve.

So, while I'm not much better off than anyone else here, I'd be happy to work out something with Randy if that's what he'd like, but in my view all three of their collections qualify as 'museums' for the purposes of preserving the more metallic aspects our collective heritage. And again, maybe I'm completely off on all this and none of you Valley folk who were around then and knew Walt and David really care about these cams; as I said, I was simply trying to catch something of potential interest to you folks as it was winging by on ebay (good catch on Stephane's part)...

P.S. But we got Randy on ST out of the deal and that's not bad either way. Welcome to ST Randy! Would love to hear how you ended up in the custom harmonica business.
fosburg

climber
Mar 21, 2009 - 10:41am PT
Walt did not make those cams. A friend of his and Dave Ingersoll's named Richard C. Hunt made cams and those are probably some of them.
Jack Burns

climber
Mar 21, 2009 - 11:59am PT
ebay sucks big floppy donkey dicks

just sayin
Jaybro

Social climber
wuz real!
Mar 21, 2009 - 01:13pm PT
I bought this unit from Mr Byrne shortly before the launch of Wired Bliss he still lived in Oregon then, I believe.

Bill Zauman was selling something similar.

Harpfreak

Trad climber
California
Mar 21, 2009 - 05:34pm PT
Ken emailed to say he has a pretty good collection of Walts gear and will add it to that. Even better than I could have hoped for.
Healy, to answer your question, I did drywall (UGH!) for 30 years and Im not a big guy so it just destroyed me. Had a few neck surgeries and started looking for am alternative. I have played harp for 16 years and was disgusted with the quality so tried making my own. I tried every kind of woodworking machinery and had never even seen a milling machine.Then someone told me I need a cnc. I looked at them and was shocked by the prices. I finally found a site for the DIY machinist. I bought a harbor freight mill and slowly bought the parts to retrofit it. I almost sold it many times thinking it would never work but finally got it finished.
Its a pretty competitive business. But I finally have a pretty decent clientele base. If I ever find that other cam like the ones in question Ill post a pic of it here. Anyone know Dave Ingersol's contact info?
fosburg

climber
Mar 21, 2009 - 06:07pm PT
Check your email Harp-Daddy.
Mighty Hiker

Social climber
Vancouver, B.C.
Mar 21, 2009 - 06:16pm PT
#1 - #3 Friends were available retail in Vancouver in spring 1979. One climber bought one in the Valley in autumn 1978, and we were all mystified by it. I think the #4 Friends became available later in 1979, or maybe 1980.

I remember all sorts of knock-offs and variations of Friends in the early 1980s. Every time you went to the Valley, someone would be hawking the things around the parking lot. The #1/2 Friend appeared in 1985 or 1986, but at about that time Metolius started producing smaller cams.
Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Mar 21, 2009 - 10:11pm PT
I just left a phone message with Dave Ingersoll to get some definitive input on all this...

Harp, looks like Kevin Fosberg has forwarded Ingersoll's contact; if not I will be happy to do so.

Cheers,
Roy
Harpfreak

Trad climber
California
Mar 22, 2009 - 04:20am PT
I dont know why Im not getting emails originating from this forum.
Its not in my spam. Not in my email at all. Can you send it to me at randyharps@comcast.net
Thanks
Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Mar 22, 2009 - 01:35pm PT
I just got off the phone with Dave Ingersoll.
Mystery solved.

As Rob, Kevin, Dick and others have attested or suspected, Walt did not make the cams.

Dave doesn't really remember telling Randy that Walt made the cams, but given the origin of the cams, this doesn't necessarily imply that Randy is misrepresenting anything to us.

Here's the trick:
The guy who originally manufactured the cams, for his own reasons, didn't want it disclosed that he had made them.

Now, to conjecture, this perhaps is why Dave and Walt were a bit tight lipped or evasive about the origin of the cams. This potentially explains why Walt didn't respond when mention was made of him as the producer of the items. Regarding what is remembered by Randy at the time of purchase, this is a vague element of history and whatever was said back then, it follows that it was meant to respect the wishes of the producer and it likewise facilitated a meager distribution. I'm sure Randy was stoked to get them, as any of us would have been, never mind what we were told about their origin.

So, per Dave Ingersoll, Walt definitively didn't make them: beyond that it doesn't much matter who did. This settles the provenance of the items, for accurate historical archiving purposes.

I sure remember how much we all wanted small cams back then, and the Oravetz/Altman units, along with any others being made (whether by secret operators), were a prized acquisition!

Thanks to Healyje & Randy for your efforts at archiving bits of history for us all.
Happy treasure hunting everybody...
dickcilley

Social climber
A cova Dos Nenos
Mar 23, 2009 - 10:20am PT
I knew Dave I. would have the facts.
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Mar 23, 2009 - 12:07pm PT
as long as we're setting historic records straight, just want to mention that the true designer behind our small 3/4 size was eben stromquist. while altman sparked the building efforts, his desires were to produce half size units between the then only available 1, 2, 3, and 4. it was clear that those sizes were needed to fit the full range of yos cracks. by that and reasons of virtual poverty dave hand built his entire rack of friends. eben was a builder of custom homes who had a shop down on the bay. he had recently added a milling machine and lathe to his tool collection and was building custom film editing devices among other things. we all climbed together. eben was an extremely gifted designer who came up with the unique small stem used in our 3/4. i jumped in and pushed the efforts into going to one size smaller, a true half, and we pushed on to going larger as well, building the first quality larger sizes, 5, 6, and 7. we built ours using the same materials (or better) than commercial friends and did some rudimentary testing. about this time eben scored a job at lucas and was involved in designing and building a lot of the inner workings for the special effects models used in the early starwars movies, in short, a real job. i supported a couple of seasons of being a climbing bum by spending countless hours in the shop. dick made a couple of bucks selling these too. hey dick how's it going?
couchmaster

climber
Mar 23, 2009 - 12:37pm PT
Jardine stole it and modified it a bit from Greg Lowe if you want to really get it right there BJ. Steve Byrne invented the 3 cam unit, and was selling them under the table as he used the Jardine patented cam design that Lowe originated as well. Lowe may have seen a Russian version of something similar I believe, but maybe Jeff Lowe can address that better than anyone else as he posts here.

Good story on these cams.
Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Mar 23, 2009 - 12:43pm PT
Jeff has related that story in fine detail elsewhere here on the forum.
I do not recall which thread holds that post.
goatboy smellz

climber
dirty south
Mar 23, 2009 - 01:13pm PT
Jello's comments on the Separate Reality thread.

http://www.supertopo.com/climbing/thread.html?topic_id=385308&msg=387286#msg387286
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Mar 23, 2009 - 01:47pm PT
never claimed any originality. we were just filling in the blanks. pretty much just for ourselves, with quality stuff we would trust our lives to, at a time when there was nothing else out there. we discussed experimenting with wire stems too, but never pursued it.
Melissa

Gym climber
berkeley, ca
Mar 23, 2009 - 03:27pm PT
This is like the History Detectives: Climbing Edition. I love it.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 25, 2009 - 05:01am PT
From Stephane Pennequin of the Nut Museum. He sometimes has Internet/email trouble their in Corsica and asks me to relay post or email for him. Like I said, he's pretty serious about researching entire stories - the lineage, history, events, climbs, people and their motivations are what I think makes it all interesting for him. Whatever it is, he's a pretty thorough chronicler of our story as seen through the lens of our equipment - sort of the Ken Burns of climbing even if only from that one unique perspective.

FTOR, in this case - and beyond just the possibility of snagging one of the cams you guys were making - it sounds like he'd like to know a lot more about this under-the-radar half-size operation you guys had going on...

===

Dear Joseph,

I read your forum thread “Two Walt Shipley-made cams on ebay” on supertopo with a great interest. In fact, when I sent you the link to these two original cams made by Walt Shipley, I must confess that I was more interested in their shape than that they could have been made by a Yosemite famous aficionado.

None of the early rigid friends 1/2” and 3/4” in my collection has an aluminium alloy stem with the upper part machined with such a reduced thickness (beautiful and really interesting!):

 Malcolm Matheson (Horsham Bruce), Australia, HB Cams (1st generation, 1981) #1/2 & #3/4, with a Stainless Steel rigid stem. These HB Cams are the very early models. Malcolm Matheson changed the brass washers for Stainless Steel ones and put a knurled surface on the end of the titanium shaft on later models.

 Steve Byrne (Wired Bliss) 1/2 inch "Friend", with a Stainless Steel rigid stem, one of the first batch made at Central Oregon Community College in 1982.

 Wild Country Baby Friend or Half Size Friend (1st generation, 1986), with a thick titanium stem.

 Wild Country Baby Friend or Half Size Friend (2nd generation, 1986), with a thin titanium stem.

Please Joseph, did you contact Rob Orovitz (“FTOR”), and have you got his email? I would be pleased if I could correspond with him and, maybe, get one of his magnificent small cams.

Thank you in advance…

Stéphane
Clint Cummins

Trad climber
SF Bay area, CA
Mar 25, 2009 - 05:32am PT
> Lowe may have seen a Russian version of something similar I believe, but maybe Jeff Lowe can address that better than anyone else as he posts here.

Jeff Lowe has addressed this on other threads here. The Russian "Abalakov" cam shown in the AAJ article by Alex Bertulis (Soviet climbing exchange to US) came out in 1975, after Jeff showed the Russians his prototype Tricams during a climbing exchange visit to Russia in 1974. The Russian cams did not even have a proper spiral - they were cut from a circular flywheel.
http://www.supertopo.com/climbing/thread.html?topic_id=268925&tn=20
http://www.supertopo.com/climbing/thread.html?topic_id=269620&tn=40

Alex Bertulis' article in the 1976 AAJ:
http://books.google.com/books?id=HkalBpP35cQC&pg=PA340&lpg=PA340&dq=%22Alex+Bertulis%22+Abalakov&source=bl&ots=56e8Q-Yo5t&sig=z9vqc0bqrzruHzKWIyTrf-sQxUM&hl=en&ei=rP3JSZvkFJK2sAOF6ojoBw&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=2&ct=result#PPA343,M1

Alex Bertulis' article in Off Belay, 1976
and followup in 1978 where Bob Dill explained a real spiral
http://www.deuce4.net/web/OffBelay.pdf
I believe it was in these articles where people started to believe Abalakov had invented this, instead of actually copying it from Jeff Lowe.

The wikipedia article is way off, and it is really just quoting John Middendorf's article without any citation - probably time to fix it (I could fix it, fairly easily).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spring_loaded_camming_device
http://www.bigwalls.net/climb/mechadv/index.html

(sorry about the thread drift - the above concerns a single passive cam and the constant-angle-cam design).
I'm glad to see Stephane' likes Rob's small cams (4 cams on solid shaft), and I'm sure he will be able to get some (as well as other similar early small camming devices, such as the ones in this recent ebay auction).
dickcilley

Social climber
A cova Dos Nenos
Mar 25, 2009 - 10:01am PT
Doing great Ftor,Six new crack boulders yesterday and all harder than Bachar crack.
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Mar 25, 2009 - 12:40pm PT
hey dick, good to hear you're cranking harder than ever. i barely climb at all, drifted off in to mtn biking, a little skate skiing, and a real job. Stephane Pennequin can email me here through the taco. be happy to provide him with any info, cams, etc. our little units were the sh-t back then, but the window was brief. hats off to whoever cam up with the wired tri cam designs, clearly the way to go with these smaller sizes. but ray was the guy who put it all together, regardless. my understanding of what he patented was the trigger system used in conjunction with the opposing cams, not the camming priciple per se. the very real fear of patent issues kept us out of mainstream markets, but as i said, it was never a desire make a lot of money that got us into this, we wanted these smaller cams for our racks.
deuce4

climber
Hobart, Australia
Mar 25, 2009 - 05:38pm PT
The Russians I've been in communication with (one of whom quoted in another Supertopo post) still defend Abalokov as having come up with the cam as protection for climbing some years prior to 1974, but I have not seen any definitive proof (though in the past I took them for their word).

The Russians I've been in communication with hang out around this site:
http://www.russianclimb.com/odintsov.html

Jeff and Greg Lowe say otherwise, so I take them for their word at this point. The Lowe version has definite proof that they conceived it by 1974--there's a patent! There's nothing from Russia to prove earlier provenance, though I'd be interested to hear if they are still claiming the origin of the idea.
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France.
Mar 26, 2009 - 12:45pm PT
FTOR, I have just sent you an email...
Again, I thank you for all your interest in "my" Nuts' Story!

Stephane / Nuts Museum
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Feb 1, 2013 - 07:59am PT
Hooray…! After a great deal of research, this morning the Nuts Museum has just been enhanced with an Associate, as Dave Altman, Rob Oravetz and Eben Stromquist used to called their little wonders. Not only it is in a perfect condition, but there is important information stamped on the back of the rigid stem: the Associates were also called Micros! Please FTOR, could you confirm me that you and your friends produced this magnificently crafted little cam? I suspect that two “generations” were created. The one with the hexagonal swages (as your oversized cams) would be the first, and the other with rounded swages would be second generation.
FTOR, the cam that truly would delight me now would be a 3/4 and I believe that, without your help, I have a very tiny chance to visualise one this century…
Edit: This Micro is not an original Associate! It is one of the later copies of the Altman/Oravetz/Stromquist design.
scuffy b

climber
heading slowly NNW
Feb 1, 2013 - 12:20pm PT
I think I have a 1/2 and a 3/4 made by Rob, which have neither "Micro"
or "Made in USA" stamped or engraved on them. Bought direct, genuine.
The 1/2 held a pretty good fall one time. I was fortunate that neither one
ever got stuck.
Will search.
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Feb 1, 2013 - 12:40pm PT
Thank you scuffy b!
None of the Associates posted here and there on supertopo has "micro" or "made in USA" stamped on the stem.
k-man

Gym climber
SCruz
Feb 1, 2013 - 05:28pm PT
I'm with scuffy, I had one of those cams (3/4 Friend size), with no stamps. It was the best cam I've ever had, smooth, smooth action.

I loaned it to a buddy, along with a bunch of other gear. They were climbing at Sugar Loaf, (Sugar Bun, to be exact), and when he left, he thought his partner had the rack.

Never to be seen, by me, again ...
scuffy b

climber
heading slowly NNW
Mar 12, 2013 - 07:18pm PT
BASE104

Social climber
An Oil Field
Mar 12, 2013 - 08:30pm PT
I am sitting here looking at an old ice screw that I shook out of a haulbag full of old junk.

Back during the cold war, it wasn't easy for the eastern european climbers to go climbing in Chamonix. There was some kind of black market going on where workers at a factory were churning out gear on the sly. Take it to Cham, sell it, and it paid for their trip.

It is made out of pure titanium, is about 10" long, and was built beautifully on a lathe. It is a work of art and weighs about 4 ounces max. Titanium is very light. It was actually a strategic metal for airplane manufacture. Russia is blessed with a lot of titanium, and it is scarce in the U.S.

Anyway, it is a damn cool piece of history. I'd give it to the Yo climbing museum if they had any use for it. It is early eighties vintage. I'll try to post a pic.

Back to Walt. He wrote tons of letters and was evidently short on paper, because they all seemed to be on the backs of topos from the old Meyers green binder. The sentences would wind around and around until every space had been used. I only have a few, but others have huge numbers of his letters.

I have no idea why Walt was so special. If you climbed with him you wouldn't get blown away, yet he put up some incredible routes later on.

Why WAS Walt so special?
telemon01

Trad climber
Montana
Mar 12, 2013 - 09:09pm PT

I have this cam that says "micro 3/4" on one side, and "made in usa" on the other. Is this the 3/4 cam you were wondering about nutstory?



I picked this up in Joshua Tree in April 1986. I always wondered who made these. It's a sweet little cam
donini

Trad climber
Ouray, Colorado
Mar 12, 2013 - 09:31pm PT
Between climbing and death there lies collecting memorabilia.
wstmrnclmr

Trad climber
Bolinas, CA
Mar 12, 2013 - 10:24pm PT
Cool thread...Never seen it till now. I climbed with Eben a lot through-out the 90s (I remember climbing with Ron O and Eben back then one day at Donner. Eben showed me one of the cams he made back then. He is a truly gifted machinest but he never claimed to have designed the friend.
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Mar 13, 2013 - 04:35am PT
telemon01: your micro ¾ perfectly matches the micro ½ that I have in the Nuts Museum (photograph in a previous post above). It is carefully crafted and… would be a wonderful addition to the collection… I do not have any information about who really made these micros. What I’m sure is that they were not manufactured by Dave Altman, Rob Oravetz and Eben Stromquist. Both small and large cams made by Altman / Oravetz / Stromquist were copied and produced “in mass” by people with access to better machining capabilities. Your little wonder is one of the later copies.

scuffy b: no doubt at all… your small cam is an original Associate! May I tell you that this treasure would find a good home here in Corsica, close to its big brother #6…


Anyway, I thank scuffy b and telemon01 for posting the photographs of these magnificent little cams.
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Mar 13, 2013 - 12:42pm PT

bookcase versions of our first gen cams. enjoy.
WBraun

climber
Mar 13, 2013 - 12:48pm PT
Yeah they're beauties !!!!

Plus if you didn't have those small sizes back then you couldn't lead "cosmic debris" on sight ....... :-)
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Mar 13, 2013 - 12:55pm PT
So FTOR... you found them again... Absolutely splendid!
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Mar 13, 2013 - 01:21pm PT
unfortunately, i have no idea where these are now. found old slides taken when we were making them. i suspect they're in eben's bookcase but it's been many years since we've last connected.
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Jun 16, 2014 - 06:04am PT
I received this carefully made ¾ “Friend”, in very nice condition, from Dana Bartlett this morning. This camming unit was made by Steve Jones. Steve was originally from Western Massachusetts – a very talented climber and skilled with tools, as well. He was an avid Yosemite climber in the late '70s and early '80s, and he made several hundred of these units and sold many of them in Yosemite at that time. Interesting to note that many of the home-made “Friends” did not have grooves in the cam lobes. Steve told that Wild Country made the cams grooved simply to make them appear as if they would grip. He put plastic coating on the trigger wires. I imagine there are some Supertopo members that bought one or two, or at least heard of them.
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Jun 16, 2014 - 06:57pm PT
as they say imitation is the highest form of flattery. (thanks big ray). i would put these in that category as many knocked off our little associates. but hundreds available for sale during that time period seems a bit of a stretch. i was pretty active in the valley scene then and barely selling my somewhat limited production runs off as is. i don't recall seeing any of these going around, at least in the valley, and i would have...
wstmrnclmr

Trad climber
Bolinas, CA
Jun 17, 2014 - 07:00pm PT
FTOR....I climbed with Eben last summer after a few years of him taking time off. I told him I had my gear stolen so he told me he'd get his gear out. When I showed up, he had all the cams he'd made out and ready to go! I think yours are still in his bookcase in Fairfax and I can certainly find out as we keep in touch. You, he and I climbed Neanderthal dudes in the mid 90's in Tahoe. I have pics somewhere......
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Jun 19, 2014 - 06:38am PT
Is there anybody on Supertopo who remembers the person that made the Micros? To date, it is still a great mystery for me.
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Jun 19, 2014 - 10:49am PT
hey wstmrnclmr, ran into eben for the first time in many years at biw recently, seems to be doing well, will have to stop by next time i hit tamarancho... the maker of the stamped micro above was thrown out up thread, but not anyone i knew at the time.
enigma

Trad climber
Sedalia, Colorado
Oct 7, 2014 - 07:31pm PT
Just to clear things up a bit on these cams, I made and sold about 400 of them over a 2 year period in the early 80s. Even sold a few John Bachar one night in Lower Pines campground. Saw a picture of Ron Kauk once with one on his rack. Dave Altman let me borrow one of his home made cams to trace the shape of the cam. Mine were made using a router and a steel master cam to trace the profile. I just about went deaf cutting the cams as I didn't have any hearing protection. My girlfriend Carol Black helped me assemble them in a friend's garage. I still have a few of them in with my old climbing gear.
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Oct 8, 2014 - 12:27am PT
PM sent
Rhodo-Router

Gym climber
sawatch choss
Oct 8, 2014 - 08:43am PT
"Between climbing and death there lies collecting memorabilia."

Nailed it.
Lorenzo

Trad climber
Oregon
Oct 8, 2014 - 01:09pm PT
As long as we are going down memory lane...
I knocked the cobwebs off these.


The rear one is an original titanium shaft 1/2 friend, maybe winter of 1985. WC came out with the flexible/tech friends the following Spring which I still use.

The one in the middle appears to be the Steve Jones variant, which makes sense, since I bought it out of the trunk of a car in the Gunks. I'm guessing that was 1983-'84 no markings on it whatever. The shaft is a grade 8 bolt. It has plastic covered trigger cables. I might have bought it from Dana. He at least told me about them.

The one in the front was the first cam smaller than a #1 friend I ever saw. 1/2 size. Bought it at Seneca maybe a year or two earlier on the Gendarme porch. Had to have it.
It scared the willies out of me, though. The shaft is the same major dimensions as the titanium friend, though of aluminum? The cams appear to be 1/2 circles of metal - certainly not any log spiral that I can see. Amazingly, the cam survived a couple falls taken on it ( others took 'em. I was too scared to fall on it) and made it up triple Direct, my first El Cap wall.


And Friends were available in 1978 in the USA. My partner bought a set for me from Jardine in the valley that Spring. He came back and presented them to me with a bill for $51 for the three. (Without asking me)
I think you could buy a rack of nuts for that back then.
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Oct 8, 2014 - 03:51pm PT
i am so glad that you cleared things up about copying my cams directly and selling hundreds of them. not exactly what we were up to. i don't think i made more than a 100 of these total bitd.
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Oct 9, 2014 - 12:36am PT
i don't think i made more than a 100 of these total bitd.
FTOR: it lets me very very little chance to find any sample without your help…

Lorenzo: the original Wild Country ½ Friend with a titanium shaft hit the market in 1986. There were two generations. The first generation has a thicker titanium stem than the second generation that tented to bend…
The Wild Country Technical Friends (or Flexible Friends) came onto the market, in 1987, in the size #0, #½, #1, and #1½. They had riveted camshaft ends that were changed for axle with low profile end-screws in 1988.


I suspect that I do have a sample of the cam in the front of your photograph. (I will post a photo in the next days). It was given to me by Marty Karabin as a custom made “Friend-like” cam made in the early 80’s by a long time valley climber and journeyman machinist.
Lorenzo

Trad climber
Oregon
Oct 9, 2014 - 12:57am PT
Nut story.

Thanks. My 1/2 Friend is def. the second generation on the bottom of your photo. I thought it was earlier than 1986, though.

I have both versions of the flex friends. I still use the ones with the button head nuts.
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Oct 9, 2014 - 01:09am PT
Lorenzo: The version with the riveted camshaft ends is “collector” as there was a recall for all the samples (rigid and flexible) that were marketed with such a configuration.
Lorenzo

Trad climber
Oregon
Oct 9, 2014 - 01:13am PT
Wait...recall?

you mean I can turn them in for new ones? ;)
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Oct 9, 2014 - 10:21am PT
interesting to see them going to a ti stem. presume they did that for strength. other early small friend builders also used ti. we went with a thicker stock, and stronger 7075 T6 al alloy. but it alway seemed axel shaft strength in the 1/2 was more of a concern, you have go with a smaller axel diameter to accommodate the smaller lobe size. in crude tests, hucking weights directly onto placements, bending of the axel was the point of failure. our axels were 4340 alloy steel, which i had commercially heat treated. one concern in seeing all the knock offs was whether they were using the same quality of materials.
Lorenzo

Trad climber
Oregon
Oct 9, 2014 - 10:37am PT
The reason I retired all three of the small cams I pictured was elongation of the hole in the shafts that the axle went trough and the resulting slop. The ti shaft included. ( it is also slightly bent in the transverse direction near the axle)

I think it is evident in this pic
mastadon

Trad climber
crack addict
Oct 9, 2014 - 07:57pm PT

A Walt Shipley biner???

Wade Icey

Trad climber
www.alohashirtrescue.com
Oct 9, 2014 - 08:14pm PT
those are his initials and I believe, his mark. klaus could confirm
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Oct 10, 2014 - 12:47am PT
The one in the front was the first cam smaller than a #1 friend I ever saw. 1/2 size. Bought it at Seneca maybe a year or two earlier on the Gendarme porch.
Lorenzo: here is the cam that truly looks like the one in the front of your photo.
Lorenzo

Trad climber
Oregon
Oct 10, 2014 - 06:28pm PT
Nutstory

Here is the cam profile on mine:


Sure looks similar, though yours looks a lot more pristine

Another thing to look at would be the shaft size. Here is mine compared to the 2nd generation 1/2 friend.

nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Oct 11, 2014 - 09:19am PT
Left to right: Micro 1/2, Steve Jones "Friend" 3/4 (1982/1983), unknown "Friend" 3/4, Wild Country Friend 1/2 (1st generation, 1986), Wild Country Friend 1/2 (2nd generation, 1986).
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Jul 30, 2015 - 10:09am PT
FTOR, as you can see above, unfortunately, there is still not any sample of your splendid micro-cams in the Nuts Museum...
Roots

Mountain climber
Tustin, CA
Jul 30, 2015 - 12:59pm PT
Would love to buy that Shipley carabiner...for sale?
Steven Amter

climber
Washington, DC
Apr 1, 2016 - 01:34pm PT
I just wanted to correct part of a post from seven years ago. I wrote:

"I also know that custom made small sized friends, and maybe TCUs hit the Gunks by no later than summer of 1983 - I bought some from Steve and Corey Rich, who were making them, and possibly visiting western climbers who were also making and selling them."

I meant Steve and Corey Jones; (credit where it due).

I guess I am also doing my part to keep this cool this thread going.
Gnome Ofthe Diabase

climber
Out Of Bed
Apr 2, 2016 - 10:37am PT

Hey,
Steve Amter,



please way-in on:

http://www.supertopo.com/climbers-forum/2784209/BAFFIN-BETA

the Baffin Beta thread
Clint Cummins

Trad climber
SF Bay area, CA
Jan 24, 2017 - 02:44pm PT
This seems to be the main thread for solid shaft cams smaller than a #1 Friend,
and I haven't seen photos of this particular model, so here you go.
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Aug 10, 2017 - 02:13am PT
Clint, I have just discovered your post!
Thank you for these great photos!
One more dreaming device for the Nuts Museum... ;-)

At the first page of this thread you wrote:
there were several people who made small cams in the late 80s prior to the arrival of TCUs. Various people were selling them in Camp 4. I have seen at least 6 different designs. Some were quite nicely made and others were crude (Rob Oravetz's were pretty nice).
Do you remember who was (is) the manufacturer of the Micro?
jaaan

Trad climber
Chamonix, France
Aug 10, 2017 - 08:21am PT
there were several people who made small cams in the late 80s prior to the arrival of TCUs. Various people were selling them in Camp 4. I have seen at least 6 different designs. Some were quite nicely made and others were crude (Rob Oravetz's were pretty nice).

There was also Malcom Matheson in Australia who made them in the 80s. They were extremely well made. Not sure of the sizing - one was about what was later to be 1/2 Friend sized and the other a little smaller. Here they are (Stephane has already seen this photo, perhaps he can fill me in on the sizing):


They date from 1985, the Euro coin, a little later...
The 'HB' stamp might be confusing. It stands for Horsham Bruce, not Hugh Banner!
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Aug 10, 2017 - 08:56am PT
jaan, your second generation of HB's is desperately missing to the Nuts Museum...;-)
karabin museum

Trad climber
phoenix, az
Aug 10, 2017 - 04:37pm PT


Clint - Cool Kuate cams. I have not seen the smaller sizes before. Looks like they were well used!
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Aug 18, 2017 - 02:07am PT
After eight years of research, and forlorn hopes, I have finally been able to add a precious Associate to the Nuts Museum!

Allow me to tell you this wonderful tale: - a couple of weeks ago, my long-time supporter healyje forwarded me a link to a Mountain Project thread with this laconic question “Prototype?”. Skye Swoboda-Colberg had found a host of fascinating old climbing devices at a goodwill sale in the Seattle area, among them a rather crude CCH Offset Trigger-Cam made in 1986 by the greatly missed Dave Waggoner. I was also able to identify the other treasures found by Skye but a small four cam unit with a rigid stem puzzled me somewhat. It was only when I carefully compared it with the two other samples in my collection (Micro ½ and Steve Jones “Friend” ¾) that I was undoubtedly able to identify it as a little cam made by Eben Stromquist, Dave Altman and Rob Oravetz circa 1983, a genuine Associate!

I posted this short message on the Mountain Project thread, as I would have thrown a bottle in the sea, with such little hope:
Skye Swoboda-Colberg, if you ever part with the small four cam unit (with a blue tape) on the right of the fourth photograph, it would be a great addition to the Nuts Museum, here in Corsica ;-)”

The very next day, I received this private message:
"Hello Stéphane PENNEQUIN (I presume), I admire your collection and am willing to send you the piece you are interested in, hopefully one day I can see the collection in person. Let me know where you want the item shipped and I'll see what I can do.
Skye"

I am most grateful to Skye for his sincere interest in my collection and for all his generosity. I have been searching for this little wonder for the past eight years now…

karabin museum

Trad climber
phoenix, az
Aug 18, 2017 - 07:28am PT

Stephane - Nice cams!




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