Bouldering Cave- floor padding ideas?

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Messages 1 - 7 of total 7 in this topic
the goat

climber
north central WA
Topic Author's Original Post - Feb 15, 2012 - 06:00pm PT
Just finished the cave but now it needs padding if someone were (not me) to fall. Other than bouldering pads what is everyone else using?
edejom

Boulder climber
Butte, America
Feb 15, 2012 - 06:15pm PT
See if you can find a close-by manufacturer that uses foam in their production--often, they will save the scrap for you to pick-up, if it means not having to pay to dispose of it.

Use it as a 1 foot (or more) base layer, then just have a drag pad for riskier falls.


Good luck and enjoy your cave :-)
the goat

climber
north central WA
Topic Author's Reply - Feb 15, 2012 - 06:35pm PT
Great! Sex stained mattresses and blood soaked sand, I'm getting the picture- "don't fall".

Edejom- Thanks for the info. That's sounds like it'll work. The room is about 10' x 12' max height 8'. Enough to feel the pain on a regular bouldering pad.
BurnRockBurn

climber
South of Black Rock City (CC,NV)
Feb 15, 2012 - 06:48pm PT

I use a four queen size mattresses 2 deep so the falls from the roof don't impact through them. The only problem is sometimes you bounce off and shot you across the room. I also padded the floor with foam floor pads and covered with thin carpet. Keeps it warm and is easy on the heals for the short falls

Shawn
the goat

climber
north central WA
Topic Author's Reply - Feb 15, 2012 - 06:58pm PT
Nice gym, Shawn! How high off the deck are you? I have a couple of old QS mattresses that would work. Too bad I threw away two last Fall, I could have given them to Klaus.
edejom

Boulder climber
Butte, America
Feb 15, 2012 - 08:16pm PT
A few pics of the gym/cave I put together, and have a key to :-)







I got 2 separate loads of loose open-cell foam scrap from Mystery Ranch Backpacks in Bozeman for the sub-foam floor (about 6-8") and a 2" carpet bonded layer for the top (spendy, but nice :-)
scuffy b

climber
heading slowly NNW
Feb 16, 2012 - 12:21pm PT
If your floor can take the load, like if it's slab on grade,
you might consider a thinck layer of gravel: not pea gravel, 3/4+ or
something like that.
It distributes the forces way better than pads, great for awkward falls
in particular.
Messages 1 - 7 of total 7 in this topic
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