A friend was shopping for female harnesses for herself at MEC in HFX. When she brought one home, I noticed something very alarming.
I'm used to the main harness waist buckle being setup in such as way that you would need to manually double-back it. Thread through a buckle with two slits in it and then back through the opposite direction which on all harnesses I've owned, you will end up 'covering your danger'. Now I know there are some new harnesses with auto double-back, which is great if you like automatic things.
These new harness buckles, esp. for women's model harnesses, have two buckles slightly offset from each other and you thread the nylon webbing through it as it would be obvious (go look at pictures on MEC.ca, etc.). The problem is, if one should catch the buckle on somthing when falling, or even walking around the base of the cliff, the harness's waist buckle can easily allow full extension of the nylon webbing causing possible fall-out.
I'm hoping someone else knows what I'm talking about with these new buckles and can shed some factual insight. Are these harnesses all death traps? It scars the hell out of me.
I guess they are calling this the double buckle style; whereas the older style seems to be called the single buckle style. Some articles are saying that the single is better with regards to accidental slippage than the double buckle.
Please discuss.