Okay, basically this is the deal with Zipline loadings.
There are two important numbers for a zipline. The first is the Breaking Load (what it snaps at) and secondly the Safe Working Load, which for ziplines is usually 1/5 of the BL for most types of cable.
If you load a cable to the BL, it snaps instantly of course. If you load it to the SWL or below, nothing happens, there is no stress or fatigue and you can basically load and unload it repeatedly forever (wear and corrosion permitting).
Now, if you load it to a figure between the SWL and the BL then it does not snap, but it will slightly fatigue and the BL will come down slightly from before. Load it the same again, the BL comes down a bit more. Eventually the BL reaches the load and it fails. It might take 5 goes. It might take 1000 goes. But it *will* fail as the number of loads it will take between SWL and BL is finite.
6mm cable has SWL of 470kg and BL of 2350kg.
8mm cable has SWL of 836kg and BL of 4180kg.
12mm cable has SWL of 1881kg and BL of 9405kg.
We load test our cables with a sag of about 10%, and with a single 100kg person on the line it can go to about 900kg cable force. Two people, which we test for in case we need to go help somebody stuck, can see it rise to about 1700kg. If the sag is less, around 5%, these figures double.
So if the CRTT lines are 6mm, or even 8mm, assuming a sag also of about 10% would see the SWL exceeded. Greatly so if it is 6mm.
So you can put a 6mm line in fine, and test it over and over and it will probably be OK for a while but it is guaranteed to fail at some point, because every time you go on it the BL comes down a few percent. It's just a waiting game.
This is why we use 12mm cables at GB, nothing smaller stays comfortably within the SWL (although 10mm does if you don't need to rescue people). Nor can you generally go bigger as virtually every pulley/trolley on the market has a maximum cable size of 12mm-13mm.
We have a special machine that goes around a zipline and tells us to the KG what forces are currently on it. Very useful to ensure that your lines are safe.
All this talk of cable says nothing of the anchors. Last time I looked that first zipline was held in by a couple of Petzl M10 expansion bolts. The SWL of those? Less than 500kg.
We use M30 resin studs on ours, 50cm deep. You get a SWL of about 7,000kg on a pair of them. Fit and forget!
Beneath my steely exterior beats the heart of a dashing hero