Grade (bouldering)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the sport of bouldering, problems are assigned technical grades according to several established systems, which are often distinct from those used in roped climbing. Bouldering grade systems in wide use include the Hueco "V" grades (known as the V-scale), Fontainebleau technical grades, route colours, Peak District grades, and British technical grades. Historically, the three-level "B" system and even the Yosemite Decimal System (sometimes with a "B" prepended, as in "B5.12") were also used.
Contents |
[edit] The Gill "B" System
The "B" grade system introduced by John Gill had only three categories. "B1" was originally defined as "... the highest level of difficulty in traditional roped climbing" [1], "B2" was something harder than that, or "bouldering level", and the grade "B3" designated a problem that had not been repeated. When a B3 saw a second ascent, it would be reclassified as a B2 (or a B1) as appropriate.
The scale was designed to gradually slide upward. As advances in traditional climbing raised standards, it was thought that many B2's would become B1, and the base level for B1 would rise. The acceptance of sport climbing made this vision hard to apply, and the scale started to take on a more fixed meaning, with designations such as "B1+" and "B2-" [2].
The system is no longer in wide use, though occasionally climbers visiting old areas in North America will encounter boulder problems rated using it. The difficulty of the problems relative to other rating systems has to be deduced relative to what year the problems were put up. Gill blames the decline in popularity of his system on it being "... against the grain of normal competitive structures, where a simple open progression of numbers or letters indicates progress."
[edit] Fontainebleau Grades
In Europe the Fontainebleau grading is the most widely used. This system ranges from 1a to 8c (the equivalent of V15 or B15), it is rare to find problems easier than 2b. The system was first devised to classify the sandstone climbing in the Fountainebleau forests in France, but is now widely used also in other bouldering areas around the world.
The grades in this system are similar to the french route grades, but have different meaning. An 8a route is significantly easier than an 8a boulder problem. To reduce confusion, some people write the bouldering grades in uppercase letters (e.g. "8B+" vs. "8b+").
[edit] The Hueco Scale
The "V" grades devised by John 'Vermin' Sherman at Hueco Tanks State Historic Site is the most widely used system in North America. The "V" system currently covers a range from V0 to V16. At the easier end of the scale, some use the designation "VB" (sometimes said to designate "basic" or "beginner") for problems easier than a V0. Particularly at the lower end of the scale, the grades are sometimes postfixed with "+" (harder) or "-" (easier) to further distinguish the difficulty range within a single grade.
The scale is similar to many other systems in that it does not take danger or scariness into account. Problems are rated based solely on the physical challenge involved. This implies that problems have the same grade on the V-scale on toprope as they would have when bouldered. [1]
[edit] United Kingdom Technical Grades
In the UK, the system known as UK techical grades is occasionally used to rate a boulder problem. These run from 4a to 7b with steps of a, b and c before changing the initial number. This system is applied because these technical grades are used in the UK grading system for trad routes to represent the absolute difficulty of the hardest move. UK technical grades were only designed to describe the difficulty of a single move making them unsuitable for grading boulders and V or Font grades are generally used instead.
[edit] Japanese Dankyu System
Japan also has developed its own grading system widely used by the local climbers of the country, adopting the Dankyu (Dan and Kyu) system from martial arts. Like in martial arts, 1-Kyu is the hardest Kyu and it gets easier as the number ascends. 1-Kyu is roughly equal to 6c+/7a in Fontainebleau grades or V5/V6 in Hueco scale. Kyu is open-ended on the easier side but practically the easiest problem could be around 10-Kyu. Dan starts from where kyu ends, 1-Dan (or Shodan) being the next grade higher than 1-Kyu, making it about 7a+/7b in Fontainebleau, V7/V8 in Hueco. Dan gets harder as the number ascends, and is open-ended on the harder side. The Wheel of Life (V16/8C+) is graded at 6-Dan.
[edit] References
- ^ Sherman, John (1995). Hueco Tanks: Climbing and Bouldering Guide, 2nd edition. ISBN 0-934641-87-0.
[edit] External links
- John Gill's Website
- John Gill Interview, at 8a.nu
- Comparison of Grades, at 8a.nu