Best climbing harnesses according to redditors

We found 47 Reddit comments discussing the best climbing harnesses. We ranked the 32 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Climbing Harnesses:

u/KnightV4 · 55 pointsr/Rainbow6

I'm not too sure about Bandit's gear, but I do have a list of what I used for Mute.

MP5K: Umarex Heckler & Koch MP5

P226: Sig Sauer P226 Metal Slide Airsoft Pistol

Facemask: Fontic Sunsing Multi-Function Facemask

Gasmask: Outgeek M50 Airsoft Mask

BDU: Rothco Military Airforce Style Flightsuit Coveralls - Navy Blue

Vest: MetalTac Airsoft Cross Draw Tactical Vest

Gloves: Uxcell Pair Chemical Resistance Rubber Gloves

Harness: Rosy Clouds Climbing Harness

Pistol Holster: Carlebben Drop Leg Holster

Boots: Any pair of all black boots/sneakers

Tape: Any gray/white tape

Patches: Honestly up to you, there's so many out there, it's basically up to personal preference.

In total cost me around $200-300 but you can definitely look for cheaper ones on other websites.

u/Noobtastic14 · 50 pointsr/climbing

Black Diamond Momentum Harness - Kid's Octane https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01N2QZTRK/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_cVNYAbM55549V

Its still a little big for real climbing but prefect for keeping him anchored on the ground. He's about 28lbs and about 20 months.

We also pair him with this awesome hiking bag for the approch. https://i.imgur.com/gq34DTU.jpg

u/TheClimbingGaucho · 13 pointsr/climbing
u/cantclimbhorizontal · 9 pointsr/climbing

I'd definitely fork out the extra twenty bucks for this sorta thing IMO. It'll be waay more comfy, although I do get that it isn't in the price range technically. Worth it though.

u/olorinfoehammer · 8 pointsr/climbing

All those items are perfectly fine, though if you are gonna go with a lot of items from BD, be aware they do offer this package deal

https://www.amazon.com/Black-Diamond-Momentum-Harness-Package/dp/B01D4VYE76

u/Vikings230 · 8 pointsr/Fitness

Holy shit that's expensive, just buy a cheap climbing harness and string it through the belay loop. I do that for pull ups and it works great. Here's a cheap harness for $20

https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B01M3XZCGR/ref=mp_s_a_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1494430731&sr=8-2-spons&pi=AC_SX236_SY340_FMwebp_QL65&keywords=climbing+harness&psc=1

u/blueblewbLu3 · 7 pointsr/paintball

Looks awesome
What holster are you using for the TR50?

All that stuff can get heavy, id recommend adding some straps to keep it up if you start having trouble

https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B00865NC2E?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share

u/texcc · 6 pointsr/climbergirls

If you're going to be top roping in it, you're going to be putting very little load on it, and therefore it is very unlikely it would fail on you. However, there is absolutely no telling what's up with these harnesses.

It says it's CE certified but to quote Rock and Ice:

"Don Bushey of the Denver retail climbing shop, Wilderness Exchange Unlimited, says he considers “brand reputation” over a CE rating. His customers, he says, never ask about CE, and the lack of CE approval doesn’t affect his decision about what gear he carries. “CE certification doesn’t guarantee a thing,” he says. “We’ve seen CE-certified carabiners arrive, new, with cracked gates.'"

You'll also never use a harness with that design for lead climbing. You'd be better off buying her a harness that you yourself can use in the future, borrowing from a friend, or perhaps buying used if you can find one from a reputable source that passes inspection isn't many years old.

Here's one from CAMP that is under 40:

https://www.amazon.com/Camp-Energy-CR-Climbing-Harness/dp/B07L6QD39M/ref=sr_1_4?dchild=1&keywords=camp+climbing+harness&qid=1569995740&s=sporting-goods&sr=1-4

u/omnired44 · 6 pointsr/climbing

I just started climbing this year and am using a Black Diamond Momentum harness. I'd have to check for sure, but I believe my wife has the same brand. I find it to be very comfortable.

If I can pass along the same advice given to me earlier this year on how to "get stronger", the advice I received was "climb more". Two months ago, it felt like I had plateaued at 5.9 grades and was having real difficulty making the jump to 5.10a. Just getting in an extra day per week from what I was doing helped a lot. I'm now at 5.10a/b and trying my hand at a 10c. Don't skip the routes you've already climbed. Doing a route you can already do is a good warmup before you hit a new/problem route. I'll also usually finish my trip with a cooldown on an previously conquered route.

u/mudra311 · 5 pointsr/climbing

https://www.amazon.com/Black-Diamond-Momentum-Harness-Graphite/dp/B00LU5A392/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1518055467&sr=8-3&keywords=black%2Bdiamond%2Bharness&dpID=51yosS1LlFL&preST=_SX300_QL70_&dpSrc=srch&th=1&psc=1

This is what I have. Very comfortable. Looks like some of the colors are on sale.

There aren't many places to be "cheap" in climbing. This stuff literally has your life in it's hands. It doesn't mean you need a fancy Petzl harness that costs $80+ (but damn it looks good).

u/crashtheparty · 3 pointsr/climbergirls

https://www.amazon.com/Black-Diamond-Solution-Climbing-Harness/dp/B019NUMUGO?th=1&psc=1

Black Diamond Solution x 1000. My first harness, worn it multiple long days outside and many hours in the gym. Comfortable for hanging and resting a long time and amazing when taking a big whipper. I am also slim in the waist and large hips/thighs and the medium was a great fit (26 inch waist is probably the smallest waist the medium can cinch to). It's so comfy I bought my boyfriend the men's one for his birthday and he loves it too!

u/kobainkhad · 3 pointsr/bouldering

https://www.amazon.com/Black-Diamond-Momentum-Harness-Graphite/dp/B00LU59XF2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1480871087&sr=8-1&keywords=black+diamond+climbing+harness

is this harness pretty good, i just used the price point as a jumping off point, but what do you guys think of this?

Edit: oh was going to buy em this too, now is this actually good or is it some just novelty thing you guys would never even bother with?

https://www.amazon.com/Gripmaster-Exerciser-Tension-5-Pounds-Finger/dp/B0006GBDZY/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1480871200&sr=8-2&keywords=gripmaster

u/ChickenPotPi · 2 pointsr/climbing

Hi, new to climbing and looking for advise. There is a new rail to trail being built near my house and I somehow became caretaker to the trail. It has been basically 70 years of neglect and was built on a granite hill with a cliff on one side and a berm on the other. The hill is composed of fractured granite with a lot of invasive species growing between the rocks and fracturing it. I would like to be able to get the invasive species out but it is impossible on the cliff side. I plan on rappelling myself on the top side and tie the rope to the trees and be able to slowly walk down the edge and pull out or cut any vegetation.

What gear would I need? I was looking at https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B018RLPEY0/ref=ox_sc_saved_title_9?smid=A5THPGRP6FZBY&psc=1 but this seems to be only when you actually fall and not provide support or anchoring while I work or is this more what I need https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B073LSTSW3/ref=ox_sc_saved_title_10?smid=A2760MNFACRLA8&psc=1 ? I know I am supposed to get dynamic rope but its only 20 feet down max, would static rope be okay?

I would like to be able to be supported behind my back or on the side to be able to make cuts with I am going to use a one handed reciprocating saw or loppers.

The cliff is 15-20 feet tall max with it being a full 90 but above it is a dirt hill with trees greater than 12 inches diameter with a steep but with ropes manageable 60-70 degrees. You can walk around the cliff to reach the top as there is a trail up there. The closer you get to the cliff the more steep it gets.

Am I doing this wrong? Is this too dangerous? Thanks in advance.

u/stevil30 · 2 pointsr/homegym

you're not buying the actual climber pulleys for their weight load - the home depot/lowe's ones are fine for that - you're buying them for the bearings and quality. a $14 dollar climbers pulley will never screeeeeech screeeeeech screeeeeech screeeeeech like the one from home depot. it's more about your sanity :)

edit: i've tried alot of pulley cable options
the green ones in the pic are these

u/katfishe · 2 pointsr/climbing

Just got in to indoor rock climbing and I’m thinking about getting a harness, but I’m not ready to spend too much. Can I get y’alls opinion on this?

If that’s not a good one, what’s a good one around that price range?

u/Ghant_ · 2 pointsr/circlejerk

Don't worry about the downvotes. It's a touchy subject for several demos, but I'm with you.

I rock scramble with my infant, and will start whitewater kayaking with him on class iii this August with a custom double tunnel skirt, but that is my job and he has been swimming underwater since 1.5 months.

As a more approachable example, I wouldn't normally let a toddler on a window washing rig, or on a construction site, but I'd trust my brother or a buddy, who are professionals, to give them a ride or a tour that might be sketchy or uncomfortable to even some adults.

These aren't "grin and pray" scenarios, nor is Op's video. It is a well managed risk assessment with a long, stepwise approach focused on fun and exploration. I'm not personally comfortable with Op's video, but I also don't understand that risk scenario. I don't know his gear, the ramp setup and start, or the worst case scenario. I will however give the pros the benefit of the doubt, and I assume that individuals with access to that ramp are pros. Edit: it is Woodward Summer Camp, and they absolutely know exactly what they are doing.

The divide is usually a misunderstanding of the general public as to the participants' actual risk. I haven't made a significant mistake on advanced-intermediate level rivers/walls/trails in many, many years. For me, a few specific activities that often send some to the hospital are far safer than an urban sidewalk. If I'm rolling with my son on beginner/intermediate stuff, it's just another "walk through the woods".

u/s1ckst0rybr0 · 2 pointsr/climbing

When I first started buying my own gear I bought this

https://www.amazon.com/Black-Diamond-Momentum-Harness-Graphite/dp/B00LU5AOR8/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1480870303&sr=8-2&keywords=black+diamond+momentum+harness

great value for everything you get in it, and all of the gear has worked great for me.

u/Jordaneer · 2 pointsr/climbing

I'm sure this has probably been asked a thousand times before, but I've gotten into climbing with a friend, and while I go bouldering multiple times a week by myself, I want to get more into taller climbing like with a harness

The local rock wall is at my university rec center (supposedly the tallest rock wall on a university campus at 55 ft high) so it's free for me to use (you do have to rent shoes and harnesses if you don't have them)

I have a pair of evolv defys as my climbing shoes (found them cheap on ebay) I was wondering if these are decent items for everything else I need

Carabiner: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B003E2Z0TW/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_F6W4ybC9TC2YT

Harness: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00LU59ZFK/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_2cX4ybNK3DENH

Belay Device: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B019NUN0SQ/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_6dX4yb98K9C72

And chalk bag: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01K1545N6/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_BfX4ybR1DMW7V

Is there anything else I'm missing? Is there anything I should change?

u/gwaybz · 1 pointr/climbing

55$?

Pfft, I can buy the momentum AL for as little as CA 8400$. It even has free shipping !

u/BikeSki603 · 1 pointr/Slackline

super late to this party but oh well:

If you are looking for something fun and packable I would suggest getting about 120' of balance communities regular feather webbing(the green kind not the pro), you won't be able to use it on highlines but it is super packable and a lot easier to rig than tubular and would be a great lightweight setup to have for traveling. plus you can also rig it primitive style pretty easily.

Once you do want to get a longline kit, it is hard to avoid the pully system. You can go on the cheaper side and get;

2* double pulleys (https://www.amazon.com/Fusion-Climb-Secura-Double-Aluminum/dp/B00P8D6H8I),

a rope grab (Petzl tiblock)https://www.amazon.com/Petzl-Tibloc-Ascender-One-Size/dp/B000AXTO8Q/ref=sr_1_1?s=sporting-goods&ie=UTF8&qid=1499726769&sr=1-1&keywords=tibloc,
a carabiner,

single pulley https://www.amazon.com/Lixada-Mobile-Single-Climbing-Rigging/dp/B01I10MMEM/ref=sr_1_5?s=sporting-goods&ie=UTF8&qid=1499726811&sr=1-5&keywords=single+pulley,

small rigging plate (https://www.amazon.com/Fusion-Climb-Aluminum-Little-Rigging/dp/B008KEDV36/ref=pd_sim_468_3?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_i=B008KEDV36&pd_rd_r=9GSDV5MPNYH1V1ND0S8N&pd_rd_w=FUuA4&pd_rd_wg=eWUeb&psc=1&refRID=9GSDV5MPNYH1V1ND0S8N)

and about 50-60' of static rope (https://www.amazon.com/GM-CLIMBING-Double-Accessory-Fluorescent/dp/B01H5CY7SQ/ref=sr_1_3?s=sporting-goods&ie=UTF8&qid=1499726145&sr=1-3&keywords=static%2Brope&th=1&psc=1) this should work fine for you and is rated to 19kn.

The most expensive part of this pulley system is going to be the brake. I would recommend a gri gri just as the simplest option and with longlining stuff like this you should be okay getting a used one off of ebay, just inspect it well before use to make sure there aren't any defects or anything. You could go ahead and use an ATC and tie the tail off but I suspect you would lose a lot of efficiency in this already pretty inefficient but cheaper set up. You can also go ahead and get the slackbro's pulleys, they aren't the best, but they are so bomber and are still nice to have around after you are trying to upgrade and may be easier than trying to piece everything together.

When it comes to webbing, that option is kinda up to you, try and make some friends with local slackline groups and walk various types of webbing and you will find what you like best, I would recommend getting 100 meters for your first length though, it's not too much to haul around and when you start rigging highlines longer than 50meters, there should be plenty of people who also have 100 meter lengths that you can partner up with.

Also keep an eye out on slackchat used gear group on facebook, you can usually find some pretty decent stuff on there.

Good luck and happy slacking!

u/Nottan_Asian · 1 pointr/Rainbow6

Copied from OP's comment to another:

I'm not too sure about Bandit's gear, but I do have a list of what I used for Mute.

MP5K: Umarex Heckler & Koch MP5

P226: Sig Sauer P226 Metal Slide Airsoft Pistol

Facemask: Fontic Sunsing Multi-Function Facemask

Gasmask: Outgeek M50 Airsoft Mask

BDU: Rothco Military Airforce Style Flightsuit Coveralls - Navy Blue

Vest: MetalTac Airsoft Cross Draw Tactical Vest

Gloves: Uxcell Pair Chemical Resistance Rubber Gloves

Harness: Rosy Clouds Climbing Harness

Pistol Holster: Carlebben Drop Leg Holster

Boots: Any pair of all black boots/sneakers

Tape: Any gray/white tape

Patches: Honestly up to you, there's so many out there, it's basically up to personal preference.

In total cost me around $200-300 but you can definitely look for cheaper ones on other websites.

u/joelluber · 1 pointr/climbing

Are the rental harnesses the cheap webbing-only kind (like this one: https://www.amazon.com/Fusion-Centaur-Harness-Orange-Climbing/dp/B00J0W4Y92)? Or are they more like the kind of harness you can buy. If they're the webbing-only kind, those are substantially less comfortable than even the cheapest you could buy.

I climb at a college gym that has free gear rental, and a substantial number of people use the rental harnesses but bring their own shoes. They used to only have the webbing-only harnesses, and most medium serious or above climbers brought their own harness, but they recently upgraded to nicer rental harness with padding, so more people use them long term, even people who own harnesses if they don't want to carry theirs around to class all day.

u/downeysyndrome · 1 pointr/cosplay

This is the harness I am using:

https://www.amazon.com/Condor-H-Harness-Black/dp/B00865NC2E/ref=sr_1_2_sspa?ie=UTF8&qid=1517865199&sr=8-2-spons&keywords=condor+harness&psc=1

I suspect velcro would present similar issues as the magnets, and also show up on the gun since it has to be external.

When you say a hook, what do you mean exactly?

The idea of a fishing line is definitely interesting, and might be worth playing around with as well

u/soupfood · 1 pointr/climbing

Super new to this! Thinking of getting a harness so I can take my mother/friends/sisters climbing while I secure them. At our climbing facility, they dont lend out harnesses, so I have been looking for a harness that fit all sizes. I found this (link below), but can I tie them in to the belay loop? Or is there a tie-in loop that I just dont see?

https://www.amazon.com/EDELRID-Climbing-Harness-Universal-743190012190/dp/B074PWHTW5/ref=mp_s_a_1_25?qid=1568116831&refinements=p_89%3AEDELRID&s=outdoor-recreation&sr=1-25

Excuse me for my bad English, I have just been learning the specialized climbing-words in my native language, so I hope I'm understandable!

u/squired · -1 pointsr/nonononoyes

Don't worry about the downvotes. It's a touchy subject for several demos, but I'm with you.

I rock scramble with my infant, and will start whitewater kayaking with him on class iii this August with a custom double tunnel skirt, but that is my job and he has been swimming underwater since 1.5 months.

As a more approachable example, I wouldn't normally let a toddler on a window washing rig, or on a construction site, but I'd trust my brother or a buddy, who are professionals, to give them a ride or a tour that might be sketchy or uncomfortable to even some adults.

These aren't "grin and pray" scenarios, nor is Op's video. It is a well managed risk assessment with a long, stepwise approach focused on fun and exploration. I'm not personally comfortable with Op's video, but I also don't understand that risk scenario. I don't know his gear, the ramp setup and start, or the worst case scenario. I will however give the pros the benefit of the doubt, and I assume that individuals with access to that ramp are pros. Edit: it is Woodward Summer Camp, and they absolutely know exactly what they are doing.

The divide is usually a misunderstanding of the general public as to the participants' actual risk. I haven't made a significant mistake on advanced-intermediate level rivers/walls/trails in many, many years. For me, a few specific activities that often send some to the hospital are far safer than an urban sidewalk. If I'm rolling with my son on beginner/intermediate stuff, it's just another "walk through the woods".