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- Piton abstract "In climbing, a piton (/ˈpiːtɒn/; also called a pin or peg) is a metal spike (usually steel) that is driven into a crack or seam in the rock with a hammer, and which acts as an anchor to protect the climber against the consequences of a fall, or to assist progress in aid climbing. Pitons are equipped with an eye hole or a ring to which a carabiner is attached; the carabiner can then be directly or indirectly attached to a climbing rope.Pitons were the original form of protection and are still used where there is no alternative. Repeated hammering and extraction of pitons damages the rock, and climbers who subscribe to the clean climbing ethic avoid their use as much as possible. With the popularization of clean climbing in the 1970s, pitons were largely replaced by faster and easier-to-use clean protection, such as nuts and camming devices. Pitons are still found in place (as 'fixed' pitons) on some established free climbing routes in places where nuts or cams do not work; and are used on some hard aid climbs.".
- Piton thumbnail Tom_Frost_-_One_cup_of_tea_-_1960.jpg?width=300.
- Piton wikiPageID "784500".
- Piton wikiPageLength "7216".
- Piton wikiPageOutDegree "42".
- Piton wikiPageRevisionID "708009729".
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Aid_climbing.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Angus_MacGyver.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Big_Cottonwood_Canyon.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Bolt_(climbing).
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Carabiner.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Category:Climbing_equipment.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mountaineering_equipment.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Clean_climbing.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Climbing.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Climbing_protection.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Copperhead_(climbing).
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink En:Seneca_Rocks.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Endurance.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink For_Your_Eyes_Only_(film).
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Free_climbing.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink I_Am_Alive.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink James_Bond.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink John_Salathé.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Julian_Glover.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Lost_Arrow_Spire.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink MacGyver.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Nut_(climbing).
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Rock-climbing_equipment.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Rock_climbing_hammer.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Roger_Moore.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Spring-loaded_camming_device.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Tom_Frost.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Utah.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Video_game.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Yosemite_Valley.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink Yvon_Chouinard.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink File:Chiodi-roccia-morbidi.JPG.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink File:Gunks_Traps_-_Pitons_on_Shockleys_Ceiling_-_1.jpg.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink File:RURP_by_Tom_Frost.jpg.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLink File:Tom_Frost_-_One_cup_of_tea_-_1960.jpg.
- Piton wikiPageWikiLinkText "PT".
- Piton wikiPageWikiLinkText "Piton".
- Piton wikiPageWikiLinkText "fixed anchors".
- Piton wikiPageWikiLinkText "pins".
- Piton wikiPageWikiLinkText "piton".
- Piton wikiPageWikiLinkText "pitons".
- Piton wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:About.
- Piton wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category.
- Piton wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:IPAc-en.
- Piton wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Piton subject Category:Climbing_equipment.
- Piton subject Category:Mountaineering_equipment.
- Piton hypernym Spike.
- Piton type City.
- Piton type HollywoodCartoon.
- Piton comment "In climbing, a piton (/ˈpiːtɒn/; also called a pin or peg) is a metal spike (usually steel) that is driven into a crack or seam in the rock with a hammer, and which acts as an anchor to protect the climber against the consequences of a fall, or to assist progress in aid climbing.".
- Piton label "Piton".
- Piton sameAs Q1404337.
- Piton sameAs Скален_клин.
- Piton sameAs Felshaken.
- Piton sameAs Piton.
- Piton sameAs Chiodo_da_roccia.
- Piton sameAs ハーケン_(登山用品).
- Piton sameAs Fjellbolt.
- Piton sameAs Hak_(wspinaczka).
- Piton sameAs Pitão_(alpinismo).
- Piton sameAs m.03c3nw.
- Piton sameAs Скальный_крюк.
- Piton sameAs Скельний_гак.
- Piton sameAs Q1404337.
- Piton wasDerivedFrom Piton?oldid=708009729.
- Piton depiction Tom_Frost_-_One_cup_of_tea_-_1960.jpg.
- Piton isPrimaryTopicOf Piton.