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710 online
Server Time:
2024-05-11 13:56:59
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'Dukes Noble Donor
Gender: Male
At least someone llikes me
| | | Re: Equipment: What to bring <Reply # 440 on 12/6/2005 2:54 AM >
| | | What a load of shit this whole thread is; all of it; bring a fifth of Jack black and some appreciation of the place you are about to visit; let the chips fall where they may. And bring a lighting system. the rest of you with your ghillie suits can go hang. Enough of this shit; learn your history, bring some illumination, end of story.
I got your tour winner right here pussies, at least he'd crash out trying. |
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Blue90
Location: TN
Shiny.
| | Re: Equipment: What to bring <Reply # 441 on 12/26/2005 1:25 AM >
| | | of course, the dobie in my boot. (quoting far side, for those of you who don't know.)
This is the way the world ends. |
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1040am
Location: Pasadena, CA
| | | Re: Equipment: What to bring <Reply # 442 on 1/1/2006 1:22 AM >
| | | Here's a subject of concern for me, a beginner in the world UE. Are asbestos masks necessary for all exploration of abandoned buildings, regardless of age?
"I can't understand why people are frightened of new ideas. I'm frightened of the old ones." - John Cage |
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MikeB
Location: Boston Gender: Male
Don't get caught.
| | | Re: Equipment: What to bring <Reply # 443 on 1/1/2006 4:24 AM >
| | | not all but i know this much: hospitals built before 1970 usually contain asbestos and for trips you should seriously consider an asbestos mask. as for abandonements in general, it depends how long its been sitting there, you might not need the mask. for places without asbestos, i would perfer to use those little medical white ones.. other than that happy ueing
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MARPAT man
Gender: Male
| | Re: Equipment: What to bring <Reply # 444 on 1/1/2006 10:48 PM >
| | | Sorry if this is the wrong topic for this thread, but i recently bought an old 1988 British army issue S10 gasmask, and was wondering if anyone knew any tips for maintenance or any links to a site which could tell me?
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Pravus
Location: Chicago Area Gender: Male
Now the two key words for tonight - "caution" and "flammable"...
| | | | Re: Equipment: What to bring <Reply # 445 on 1/2/2006 8:38 AM >
| | | Posted by MARPAT man Sorry if this is the wrong topic for this thread, but i recently bought an old 1988 British army issue S10 gasmask, and was wondering if anyone knew any tips for maintenance or any links to a site which could tell me?
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Get a P100 filter or something thats rated for asbestos.. and as far as asbestos masks and how important they are.. I currently don't own one.. I REALLY should.. but even if there is no asbestos theres a lot of dust and just random crap in abandon places.. the other day there was so much dust and crap in the air we were choking on it.. if anything they would be nice to have..
Live to Serve, Serve to Live.. |
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MARPAT man
Gender: Male
| | Re: Equipment: What to bring <Reply # 446 on 1/3/2006 1:16 AM >
| | | But make shure its not an old one, as some may actually contain asbestos in their filters. [last edit 1/3/2006 1:17 AM by MARPAT man - edited 1 times]
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hovburglar
Location: Salt Lake City/Sugarhouse Gender: Male
| | | Re: Equipment: What to bring <Reply # 447 on 3/19/2006 12:05 AM >
| | | Posted by Jester Depends upon the thickness and type of material between the radios. The radio waves will only travel so far through different materials.
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UHF portable radios (try ebay) are the best for penetrating building walls
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RedDevil
Location: M'boro, TN, USA Gender: Female
| | | Re: Equipment: What to bring <Reply # 448 on 3/23/2006 12:45 PM >
| | | I'm still pretty amateurish in my endeavors. I've only gone into a storm drain, a recently-condemned/now-demolished building, and a few strange nooks in public access buildings where I'm not supposed to go. As such, my equipment list is minimal and not for long missions or any special hazards. Pocket First Aid Kit (Bandaids, iodine and alcohol pads, sterile gauze) waterless soap screwdriver/Gerber tool (flat and phillips) Gloves (Environment dependant - work, leather, or [kevlar - is on my wishlist]) Map (marked escape routes after initial exploration) Ducttape Navy workman's coveralls (zippered - only used for the storm drain and condemned building) Business card & nice-ish clothes [under my coveralls.] (Why? If busted, I'm a graphic designer trying to buff up my personal stock of photos for projects and clients.) Maglite Flashlight Camera & sometimes tripod Chalk So far I've either used deep pockets or a satchel for carrying supplies, but I'm considering investing in a camel back or other such hiking water source. Any reccomendations for what to look for or the brand, or warnings about what NOT to get?
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Pravus
Location: Chicago Area Gender: Male
Now the two key words for tonight - "caution" and "flammable"...
| | | | Re: Equipment: What to bring <Reply # 449 on 3/23/2006 3:10 PM >
| | | Posted by RedDevil So far I've either used deep pockets or a satchel for carrying supplies, but I'm considering investing in a camel back or other such hiking water source. Any reccomendations for what to look for or the brand, or warnings about what NOT to get?
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Backpacks that hold a bladder are rather nice.. Wearing both sucks alot..
Live to Serve, Serve to Live.. |
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Core
Location: MI Gender: Male
Warning: Some side effects may occur
| | | Re: Equipment: What to bring <Reply # 450 on 3/26/2006 6:23 PM >
| | | Small rugged flashlight Sidewalk chalk Wet-Wipes Gloves Zipties Small First-Aid kit Camara Extendable Baton Membership Card to Historical Society I also wear a fishing vest and cargo pants. The vest has a ton of pockets I can store stuff in. It looks suspicious but if you wear it under a hoodie no one will know you have it on ;) I also recommend a cheap GPS unit so you can tell others about an abandoned place without resorting to directions like "it's the fourth road after the cow pasture drive down till you see a big tree then get out and walk through the woods for 10 minutes." [last edit 3/26/2006 6:27 PM by Core - edited 1 times]
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Yankee
| | Re: Equipment: What to bring <Reply # 451 on 4/11/2006 12:11 PM >
| | | spare pair of socks in zip lock bag. i mostly do drains, and theses are invaluable esp at 3 am when i have a 1 1/2 to 3 hour bus trip home in soggy shoes ahead of me. personally i like messenger bags coz i can open it on the move, without taking it off, flip in front of me in wet areas, or when ik crawling. and i need a headlamp, i discovered this on my sydney cave clan newbies(3 weeks ago!), when i climbed down 40 metres of rusty debris filled ladders, in the pitch black, coz i couldnt carry my mag lite and my mini mag was on the blink.
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BLUEVALK
Location: Utah County,UTAH Gender: Male
| | Good U.E. Gear to Have? <Reply # 452 on 4/11/2006 10:04 PM >
| | | What is some good gear to have when U.E.ing? Being a very outdoorsy (is that a word?!?!) I have acquired a fair bit of gear. Just wondering what is everyones favorite gear to have? Also, maybe some suggestions of some not-so-basic gear. My gear includes:
Headlamp w/ optional red lense (for those covert trips) ha ha Gloves Handheld Flashlight Motorolla 2-way Radios Lightsticks G.P.S. (not so needed, but helpful for finding and giving directions) Spare Batteries Digital Camera Spotlight Camelback (for those long treks) Knife Rope&gear SOME surveillance Equip.
Most of this stuff of coarse, I do NOT take with every time, but have the option if needed. I would like to learn more about rope and rope safety and also photography and night photography( seems light some of these big places just swallow up your flash) If anyone has any suggestions on Gear,Rope oR photography I would greatly appreciate it.
[Merged with existing gear thread. -Misfit] [last edit 4/17/2006 3:29 AM by -MisfitStyle- - edited 1 times]
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Sinister Crayon
Location: Colorado Gender: Male
| | Re: Good U.E. Gear to Have? <Reply # 453 on 4/11/2006 10:18 PM >
| | | Posted by BLUEVALK What is some good gear to have when U.E.ing? Being a very outdoorsy (is that a word?!?!) I have acquired a fair bit of gear. Just wondering what is everyones favorite gear to have? Also, maybe some suggestions of some not-so-basic gear. My gear includes:
- Headlamp w/ optional red lense (for those covert trips) ha ha
- Gloves
- Handheld Flashlight
- Motorolla 2-way Radios
- Lightsticks
- G.P.S. (not so needed, but helpful for finding and giving directions)
- Spare Batteries
- Digital Camera
- Spotlight
- Camelback (for those long treks)
- Knife
- Rope&gear
- SOME surveillance Equip.
Most of this stuff of coarse, I do NOT take with every time, but have the option if needed. I would like to learn more about rope and rope safety and also photography and night photography( seems light some of these big places just swallow up your flash) If anyone has any suggestions on Gear,Rope oR photography I would greatly appreciate it.
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A good section to post this in is the UE Tutorials, Lessons, and Useful Info. As for your list, most of it can be cut down to:
- Handheld Flashlight
- G.P.S. (not really necessary unless giving info about the site...)
- Spare Batteries
- Digital Camera
Knife (a definite no, if found on you, it can get you in some deep shit.)
- Rope & gear (could help)
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JustINSANE
Location: NJ/Boston Gender: Male
| | | Re: Good U.E. Gear to Have? <Reply # 454 on 4/11/2006 11:01 PM >
| | | Posted by Sinister Crayon
AKnife (a definite no, if found on you, it can get you in some deep shit.)
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if its a small pocket knife how would you get in deep shit considering lots of ppl carry them around 24/7 its also a good form of protechtion incase you run it to some trouble (from non law enforcement)
"brocore" |
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Sinister Crayon
Location: Colorado Gender: Male
| | Re: Good U.E. Gear to Have? <Reply # 455 on 4/11/2006 11:05 PM >
| | | Posted by JustINSANE
if its a small pocket knife how would you get in deep shit considering lots of ppl carry them around 24/7
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Meh, I had a bad experience with the police and having a pocket knife, but people usually don't like knives in the possession of teens anyways, especially in the mall (which I try to avoid.)
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JustINSANE
Location: NJ/Boston Gender: Male
| | | Re: Good U.E. Gear to Have? <Reply # 456 on 4/11/2006 11:18 PM >
| | | thats true because some idiotic people like to do stupid things with them i guess it depends on who stops you and sees it
"brocore" |
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Lexi
Location: Oslo, Norway Gender: Female
I'm getting old.
| | Re: Good U.E. Gear to Have? <Reply # 457 on 4/11/2006 11:50 PM >
| | | I have a bit of a rule on knives: Short enough to be legal, long enough to be lethal. Look up the legal measurements for street-carrying knives in your city/state/province. Here it's something like 3 and an a quarter inches, mine's three inches so it's barely legal. Another good idea is a multitool.. they're extremely useful and still have a legal blade that you can use if you're in a tight spot.
[15:00:33] <SeeThirty> cause you're not likely to be anywhere that other people haven't been who didn't have protection [15:00:41] <SeeThirty> still better safe than lexi |
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JustINSANE
Location: NJ/Boston Gender: Male
| | | Re: Good U.E. Gear to Have? <Reply # 458 on 4/12/2006 12:02 AM >
| | | like a leatherman i have one i love it so useful ive always been taught that if its longer then the width of your palm it's illegal
"brocore" |
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SLCblue
Location: Salt Lake City Gender: Male
THINK OF THE SIDECAR!
| | | Re: Good U.E. Gear to Have? <Reply # 459 on 4/12/2006 12:38 AM >
| | | Yeeah...I'd like to get a blade, simply because in many of the places I go, I don't know who I'm going to come across. I'll have to look up Utah's statute...
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