Front | Rear | Top |
Left | Right | Bottom |
I acquired my NAT from Xuefei Liu in 2013.
The NAT is a notched belay tube. It is forged from aluminum alloy and soft anodized. Mine is 55 mm. long, 45 mm. wide, 86 mm. high, and weighs 63 g. It has two slots with ribbed v-grooves and a plastic-covered cable keeper. The slots are 35 mm. long and 15 mm. wide. The top of the Omega oval carabiner that I use for comparing belay tubes sits 15 mm. below the ends of the slots.
One side is printed with a climber icon, a forearm & hand-holding-a-rope icon, and "NAT."
The NAT is one of the following essentially identical notched belay tubes:
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Each of these is 54±1 mm. long and 45±1 mm. wide, and has a weight in the 60±7 g. range. Their slots are all 35 mm. long and 16 mm. wide.
The shallow V-notches used in this design do not seem to be very effective at increasing the braking force. The notches do not have the narrow angle found on the Trango Jaws and its equivalents, so they do not create the same wedging action. Spreading the friction helps with heat dissipation, but like all belay tubes, these can get quite hot when used for rappelling.
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