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#1
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Thermalling, Anyone!
Sure glad I've got a square, ram-air chute AND know how to collapse it!
You can see clearly the associated dust devil.. http://www.military.com/video/specia...1858777535001/ |
#2
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Thermalling, Anyone!
Getting a good video for YouTube was more important that rescuing this poor unconscious fellow being dragged along the ground.
In Soviet Russia, canopy collapses you. |
#3
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Thermalling, Anyone!
If you have not already seen it, you might learn something from this:
http://uras.gliderpilot.net/?op=s2&id=35764&vt= (You may have to register and log in to read the explanatory text, but I think you can click directly onto the related video without that if you wish – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Kx-b...LQPQ nZBqf_Ih Chris N |
#4
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Thermalling, Anyone!
On 3/2/2013 5:31 PM, Chris Nicholas wrote:
If you have not already seen it, you might learn something from this: http://uras.gliderpilot.net/?op=s2&id=35764&vt= (You may have to register and log in to read the explanatory text, but I think you can click directly onto the related video without that if you wish – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Kx-b...LQPQ nZBqf_Ih I've never heard of the "undo the chest strap first" rule. Must not be a very important one, if it's that much work to get into trouble. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) |
#5
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Thermalling, Anyone!
It is not a written rule AFAIK. It has been circulating orally as
“advice” in UK gliding circles – I first heard it when somebody saw me undoing the parachute straps in the “wrong” order. Chris N |
#6
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Thermalling, Anyone!
If you have just descended by parachute the canopy will already be open. It looks as though the important thing might be to know how to collapse the canopy.
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#7
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Thermalling, Anyone!
On Sunday, March 3, 2013 12:01:11 AM UTC-5, Eric Greenwell wrote:
On 3/2/2013 5:31 PM, Chris Nicholas wrote: If you have not already seen it, you might learn something from this: http://uras.gliderpilot.net/?op=s2&id=35764&vt= (You may have to register and log in to read the explanatory text, but I think you can click directly onto the related video without that if you wish – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Kx-b...LQPQ nZBqf_Ih I've never heard of the "undo the chest strap first" rule. Must not be a very important one, if it's that much work to get into trouble. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) The explanation given he http://www.iac52.org/safetywise/safetywise.html is that if you have landed or are being dragged you undo the chest strap first, if you don't and the chute inflates it could choke you as it drags you. JP |
#8
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Thermalling, Anyone!
I had plenty of simulation training during my Air Force pilot training.
Forty years later, I bought a ram air emergency chute and got training at the local jump club. What a rush! I'm now quite comfortable with the prospect of jumping, though I don't want to leave my glider. BTW, the ram air chute opens much quicker than a round chute, has a forward speed of about 11-15 kts and is highly maneuverable. Mr. Silver's advice was to take a tandem jump, but that was not for me. I took the IAD (Instructor Aided Deployment) approach whereby the instructor holds my pilot chute in his hand as I crawl out onto the platform. When I arch and go, he tosses my pilot chute. I then have the whole sky to myself to get familiar with flying the canopy. The flying part (with a square chute) is easy as pie for a glider pilot(!) and you fly the same kind of traffic pattern with essentially the same altitudes as in a glider. You're just a bit closer to the touchdown zone. It was so much fun that I did it six more times, but the cost was a bit high to continue without buying my own equipment... "Jp Stewart" wrote in message ... On Sunday, March 3, 2013 12:01:11 AM UTC-5, Eric Greenwell wrote: On 3/2/2013 5:31 PM, Chris Nicholas wrote: If you have not already seen it, you might learn something from this: http://uras.gliderpilot.net/?op=s2&id=35764&vt= (You may have to register and log in to read the explanatory text, but I think you can click directly onto the related video without that if you wish – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Kx-b...LQPQ nZBqf_Ih I've never heard of the "undo the chest strap first" rule. Must not be a very important one, if it's that much work to get into trouble. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) The explanation given he http://www.iac52.org/safetywise/safetywise.html is that if you have landed or are being dragged you undo the chest strap first, if you don't and the chute inflates it could choke you as it drags you. JP |
#9
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Thermalling, Anyone!
On Sunday, March 3, 2013 12:06:06 PM UTC-5, Dan Marotta wrote:
I had plenty of simulation training during my Air Force pilot training. Forty years later, I bought a ram air emergency chute and got training at the local jump club. This is very enticing but I've held off because I was concerned that I might injure my legs/back. I'm not overweight, but my bones are older and a cast would kill a season of soaring. I'd do this at the end of the season if ever, but then I'd worry about missing ski season and putting on 30 pounds over a winter of inactivity. |
#10
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Thermalling, Anyone!
Yikes. That guy looks completely limp by the end of the video. Sad.
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