DaveInDenver
Middle Income Semi-Redneck
You must start with a known shackle, so no, you cannot know any shackle is good. I would trust Crosby, Gunnebo, Columbus McKinnon, Campbell or Van Beest that you can reasonably assume is not counterfeit (this is common to everything, so can we agree to the assumption that a shackle, length of rope, block, etc. is what it says it is?).How do you know a steel shackle you pick up is good? Has it been overloaded? Dropped on a hard surface? Is it a quality unit? How do you know.....
A caliper isn't going to tell you the quality of the steel.
I've refused to use, or retired, a fair number of steel shackles......bent pins, bent bodies, corrosion pitting, etc.
26-1.8.5 Removal Criteria
Shackles shall be removed from service if conditions such as the following are present and shall only be returned to service when approved by a qualified person:
(a) missing or illegible identification
(b) indications of heat damage, including weld spatter or arc strikes
(c) excessive pitting or corrosion
(d) bent, twisted, distorted, stretched, elongated, cracked, or broken load-bearing components
(e) excessive nicks or gouges
(f) a 10% reduction of the original or catalog dimension at any point around the body or pin
(g) incomplete pin engagement
(h) excessive thread damage
(i) evidence of unauthorized welding or modification
(j) other conditions, including visible damage, that cause doubt as to the continued use of the shackle
If a shackle is dropped, run over, left on a bumper to rust, whatever and it doesn't meet those criteria it gets replaced. Yup, most of it is subjective just like fuzz on a synthetic rope. But the caliper does not lie on (f). If the body and pin match the same diameter as the catalog says it should and the shackle otherwise appears clean, uncut and the threads engage fully it is absolutely reasonable to assume it will meet the rating.
A qualified person can always proof test a shackle and reinspect against 26-1.8.5. If it passes then it's OK to put back into service, even for safety critical use.
And no, you can't carry calipers all the time. I'm talking about periodic inspection of your recovery equipment. When someone hands me a shackle in the field, regardless if its soft or steel, there's a level of trust. I would offer to use my own gear if there was some doubt.
Bottom line is we all have to come to our own conclusions. I'm not saying you shouldn't use soft shackles if you want. I'm simply suggesting why I prefer what I do. If that means you don't act like an anchor for me that's your option. But the sky is falling, drop every ounce from rigging viewpoint isn't unquestionably correct. There's downsides and upsides both ways.
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