Shopping Cart

Your cart is empty.

Your cart is empty.

BlueWater Ropes 1' Tubular Climb-Spec Nylon Webbing

Free shipping on orders over $29.99

$18.95

$ 8 .99 $8.99

In Stock
  • Soft, supple and easy to tie
  • Fine weave pattern resists picks and snags
  • Tensile Strength: 4,000 lbf. (17.7 kN)
  • Weight: 40 grams per meter
  • CE EN 565, UIAA certified


Soft, supple and easy to tie. The fine weave pattern resists picks and snags for a long life. CE certified with a tensile strength of 4000+ lbf. Nylon tubular webbing in a variety of colors. Made in the U.S.A.

CE EN 565, UIAA

Width: 1"
Tensile Strength: 4,000 lbf. (17.7 kN)
Weight: 41 grams per meter


Bueno
Reviewed in the United States on December 14, 2024
Good
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on March 14, 2022
The straps are good, they hold weight, they're easy to cut and melt and make into stuff.I bought them to make OLY lifting straps, the kind that are sewed/taped at the ends into a teardrop shape, not the heavy deadlifting straps you tie around your wrists.They're great for saving your grip endurance during single arm dumbbell rows or trap raises or lunges, for deadlifts they work. They hold the weight, but the 1 inch webbing is too thin for me personally. Nice and soft though, not rough like furniture lifting straps or tie downs/strap downs.If you want to make your own lifting straps for heavy duty lifting, get some 1.5 or even 2 inch webbing, this product is good, so i'm sure if bluewater makes larger webbing that would be good as well.Otherwise great product, webbing wasn't rough at all, came fast, big roll of webbing for like ~10 bucks, which is the lowest price you'll find a single set of straps for.
JFL
Reviewed in the United States on October 26, 2019
This tubular webbing very strong...easy to handle...easy to tie untie cinch...winch up ...a great human invention...because my old hands can untie it...good stuff..good price...just dont haul cars with it and you will be ok
T. Davis
Reviewed in the United States on October 17, 2019
Good strong stuff. I use this for saddle loops on some tree branches, pulling 1/16" steel rope through for our garden string lights.It may be fine for climbing, but I would not trust it for that without consulting a local expert resource.
Piper
Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2017
These worked wicked well for top-rope anchor-building when slinging trees. They shipped and got to me really quickly as well, which was a pleasant surprise!I purchased four of these to construct top-rope anchors for a recent climbing trip to sling trees in an area we had never been before. We had tons of leftover length that we wrapped around several times around a tree, on climbs that were closer to the trees/anchors, but had enough in instances where the trees/anchors were further back as well.These honestly worked wonders. I felt really confident in using these with a water knot with at least a 3-4 inch tail, but we added a back up single fisherman's to the tails just to be safe.Very solid for climbing and belaying off of when slinging sturdy trees, just have to be sure to tie your water knot appropriately! :)
Capt
Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2016
Some years ago I took a Fast Rescue Boat course taught by former Los Angeles Life Guards who in the course of their learning how to operate Rigid Hull Inflatable Boats (RHIBs) were in a position to teach USCG and USN personnel. When the Standards for Training and Certification of Watchkeeprs for merchant mariners was enacted and Fast Rescue Boats were added to the required certification, 12 foot long webbing was introduced to us. I've not seen them on YouTube the way I was taught - they have showed the Water Knot how to join the webbing [...] - a throw bag is part of the rescue solution too - heaving and stuffing it are shown on [...](throwing) - [...]What's missing is using webbing to make a non-cinching loop around someone you have to haul onboard - often called a double lark's head - that can be turned into a harness for a rescue swimmer - allowing a carabiner to attach harness to throw bag - letting rescuer grab the victim and the person on the boat or shore or dock haul the two people to them.I've also used this webbing material for a 2nd story home escape apparatus - [...]This is great stuff. This webbing is easy to work with - use a lighter to keep edges from unraveling.
joeylo73
Reviewed in the United States on November 29, 2015
So I use this stuff to make handles for a project at work. It worked great. Super strong. Easy on the hands when lifting heavy weights with it. There's plenty of it in the bag. Like 50 feet I think. Good stuff. At this point I should qualify my review. I'm not a climber. I have no idea what climbers use this stuff for and I have no idea
S. Browning
Reviewed in the United States on October 21, 2013
I split the webbing into 15' segments to use for my hammock. So far it has worked really well. Holds tension well, holds knots well, and stays pretty clean.I use another one for climbing anchors and that has held up just as well, and I'm expecting them to last for a while.Definitely consider for use with your hammock if you can tie a basic water knot, its a lot more weight bearing than ENO's straps and wont sag in the dew. Plus it's cheaper!Solid product by Bluewater
Recommended Products

$99.99

$ 41 .99 $41.99

4.3
Select Option

$22.95

$ 10 .99 $10.99

4.6
Select Option

$13.95

$ 6 .99 $6.99

4.5
Select Option

$3.60

$ 1 .99 $1.99

4.7
Select Option

$16.95

$ 7 .99 $7.99

5.0
Select Option