I enjoy its low stretch. In my usual park spots (40-45m in length) I don't need a multiplier to tension it with a primitive.
Usually low stretch means "not bouncy", but that's not true for this line (that's probably because of the low weight? IDK actually), feels rather unique.
Minor downside: it's kinda delicate, scratches on borders can damage it.
Parfait, après plusieurs utilisation en primitiv slackline, la slack tient la route :) et est toujours aussi légère dans le sac ^^
Au top, ultra léger :O idéal pour un kit de voyage :)
I have been using my 66m helium as a light park webbing or if needed doing couple of primitive lines from the same webbing continuing with the tail. I like that is not that static, I see that beginner-intermediate(who can walk 25meters) level people tend to like it and have good time on it.
At high tensions it gets a little sharp in the edges but with time you learn how to rig it=)
There was also an extra sewn loop on the other side of the line where I did not ordered which was a nice surprise!
Good sewn loop quality, I really like them!
I have 33m of this webbing that I used as a super minimalist travel line (no metal, just the line and knots) for about a year and a half and it's still holding up great. It's seen a lot of use, during the quarantine 2 months straight 4 times a week on the beach ie lots of sand and abrasion, it has some abrasion damage in spots (from sloppy rigging on stone or concrete, not from the sand) but it's still fine, wouldn't highline on it but in the park ¯\_(ツ)_/¯. It's nice that it's so low stretch, I've put up ~28m lines (almost the whole line minus what's needed for the anchors) with just hand tension. Yeah it's not the fanciest line, it's a lil sharp but not too noticeable or bothersome when you're on it imo (maybe if you're doing tons of barefoot exposure), but as a cheap lightweight(!) travel line that can take a beating this is a great webbing.