Collectible Pitons?

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Messages 1 - 8 of total 8 in this topic
Piner

Mountain climber
del mar, Ca
Topic Author's Original Post - Oct 29, 2013 - 10:55am PT
I purchased some climbing gear on ebay and the seller included these pitons. I'm trying to get a history lesson and see if these are items that are still being collected. The pictures should speak for themselves, please post any known info or links. Thanks!

Some of them look to be hand-forged (but then again what do I know?)
Piner

Mountain climber
del mar, Ca
Topic Author's Reply - Oct 29, 2013 - 11:02am PT
Hahaha......Touche!!!
nutstory

climber
Ajaccio, Corsica, France
Oct 29, 2013 - 11:43am PT
CL SIMOND stands for Claudius SIMOND (Chamonix)
crunch

Social climber
CO
Oct 29, 2013 - 11:53am PT
Hyatt is an old UK company. They made (cheap, poorly made) carabiners, 1970s. Never knew they made pitons.
duncan

climber
London, UK
Oct 29, 2013 - 12:22pm PT
I had a bunch of Hiatt lost arrow type pitons given to me which now reside in various bits of the Avon Gorge. One or two even made it up El Cap. They were a standard design and decent steel to my limited understanding of such things. I also had one of their carabiners, a massively over-engineered steel item suitable for mooring a medium-sized aircraft carrier.

There is a thread here: http://www.supertopo.com/climbers-forum/791422/Hiatt-pitons

Some history of the company who mainly made handcuffs and leg-irons here: http://www.smhc.co.uk/objects_item.asp?item_id=32875
JimT

climber
Munich
Oct 29, 2013 - 03:13pm PT
Hiatt is now part of Monadnock which is in turn part of Safariland who are leaders in the enforcement equipment business. Those guys shuffling around in Guantanamo are reputedly wearing Hiatt restraints.
Hiatt krabs had their issues, mainly sharp edges to the gate which gave a nasty nip and the chrome versions which peeled leaving flakes of metal in your fingers. Strongest karabiners we´ve ever tested though, 49kN for a normal D biner isn´t to be sneered at 50 years down the line. I still use one of the gigantic belay biners on my tester!
Clint Cummins

Trad climber
SF Bay area, CA
Oct 29, 2013 - 03:15pm PT
The LA on the right side of this photo is a Clog.
The pitons on the left side look like CMIs, but I can't see a Cmi logo on them.
Another thread indicates they were also made by Clog.
Piner

Mountain climber
del mar, Ca
Topic Author's Reply - Oct 29, 2013 - 07:06pm PT
Thanks for the info, much appreciated!!!
Messages 1 - 8 of total 8 in this topic
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