Never used a Bridger bodygrip...but if the spring eyes will come around the corners.....y'all can keep them.
I'll spend my $$ on Belisles.
That's not the problem with them (although it may be an issue with the new ones if they enlarge the spring eyes, but doubtful). The problem is that their spring eyes are small, which of course means that they a)don't go around the corner and b)hold the jaws closed tightly. These are the pluses and I'm assuming the reason they made them this way. The minuses and the reason so many won't use Bridger bodygrips is that they are a royal pain to set, and very difficult to use setters on. Now I haven't used most of the sizes, and from what I understand some sizes are better than others, but many of them the spring eyes won't fit over the jaw hinge, and with many setters you can't squeeze them tight enough to set the safeties because there simply isn't room for the setters. I've just used the small Bridgers, and the 120s have the highest complaints of any size, pretty sure I'm the only guy on here who will admit to buying more after using them (the price is right, and the work reliably and effeciently on animals) they combine small spring eyes, with very strong, very short springs. Making them both difficult to set with setters and very stout and difficult to set by hand. I will say that after they have been set and used a few times the springs 'limber up' and become much easier to set by hand. If they stayed as hard to set as they are new out of the box I would probably quit using them. The 150/155 size has slightly longer springs, making them unbelievably easier to set by hand, while not losing any noticeable power, but the same issues if you were to try to use setters on them.
Setting with a rope will work fine, except for the issue of the spring eyes hanging up on the jaw hinge .