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tymkoder 0
I have Kitted my Mojo 280..
here is how it went..
I went to the local park to air out my canopy. by the time I got here the winds had picked up to much to do a standard ground inspecion.. sooo....
I walked across the park and climbed up the 200 foot hill at the top stood a nice tree.. with wind blowing from 30 degrees off the back of the hill over the top at about 25 MPH..
I climbed the tree wrapped myself around the tree and dropped my canopy with 180 twist so that it would inflate..the wind was at my back and I was looking around the tree over the hill.. Instantly my canopy blasted straight up. so with out more thought I slid to the side and let go...
ZZZIIINNNGGG... i blasted up 30 feet inthe air. over the edge of the hill. everything seemed fine.. untill I tried to spin out of the line twist. spinning caused me to load the canopy wrong and make the canopy dive to the right back intot he hill. FLAIR FLAIR FLAIR..... PLF I was on the ground.. the the wind caught the caonpy again. and I was back up in the air for at least a moment untill I hit again and the was drug for 50 yards. then back up inthe air flying again.. then..
I was like a rag doll after fight running hitting the ground and being drug for 100 yards or better I finally decided to pull the cutaway handle...
the kids at the playground thought it was awesome
DOES THIS QUALIFY ME TO BE A PARAGLIDER?
here is how it went..
I went to the local park to air out my canopy. by the time I got here the winds had picked up to much to do a standard ground inspecion.. sooo....
I walked across the park and climbed up the 200 foot hill at the top stood a nice tree.. with wind blowing from 30 degrees off the back of the hill over the top at about 25 MPH..
I climbed the tree wrapped myself around the tree and dropped my canopy with 180 twist so that it would inflate..the wind was at my back and I was looking around the tree over the hill.. Instantly my canopy blasted straight up. so with out more thought I slid to the side and let go...
ZZZIIINNNGGG... i blasted up 30 feet inthe air. over the edge of the hill. everything seemed fine.. untill I tried to spin out of the line twist. spinning caused me to load the canopy wrong and make the canopy dive to the right back intot he hill. FLAIR FLAIR FLAIR..... PLF I was on the ground.. the the wind caught the caonpy again. and I was back up in the air for at least a moment untill I hit again and the was drug for 50 yards. then back up inthe air flying again.. then..
I was like a rag doll after fight running hitting the ground and being drug for 100 yards or better I finally decided to pull the cutaway handle...
the kids at the playground thought it was awesome
DOES THIS QUALIFY ME TO BE A PARAGLIDER?
CHICKEN MAN
BASE 954
BASE 954
Faber 0
no that makes you a ground launcher he he
Stay safe
Stefan Faber
Stay safe
Stefan Faber
tdog 0
QuoteGiven the similarities, perhaps cooperation would work better than confrontation.
Very good point... I know little about BASE jumping other than I respect it a lot more now that I have jumped out of a plane. My line twists today would have killed me if I was base jumping as I burned 1000 feet kicking out of them under a mildly spinning non-landable canopy…
The press and main stream reputation about BASE jumping is that it is done by rebellious people who use bolt cutters and other tools to BASE without permission - and that, in a way, is what makes it cool.
Whereas, paraglider pilots go out of their way to make sure what they do is approved by whoever has jurisdiction... If you fly off a site without permission from the owners, other paraglider pilots will make sure your ratings are revoked. If you fly when a FAA NOTAM is in place, you will get kicked out of the sport. (as they don’t want FAA regulation) They just (at least the locals I knew) don't tolerate anyone who has the attitude, "do it now, ask for forgiveness latter." The last thing they want is a rebellious or illegal activity reputation. I think this is EXACTLY what BASE jumpers must face when they have a legal site used by the community. One BASE jumper breaks rules – the people who control access to the site start second-guessing their decision and want to close it down…
Quote
I'm going to go dig around the USHGA web site, and see if I can join...
I know you can! Just like you can be a non-rated USPA member, you can be a non-rated USHGA member... You will get a cool magazine with incident reports and stories of cross country flights, and articles on how to do fancy maneuvers like wingovers.
But, why don’t you take a few weekends and learn and become rated??? Even at P1 - you will learn hours of basic wind information to learn when a hill is safe to fly and when it is not.
The paragliding class is very similar to AFF, but much cheaper. I paid $1000 for LIFETIME training - I could just show up any day I wanted and get instruction... You will do a lot of ground school with and without gear, then fly off a little mountain the same weekend. Then you have your P1... After a few dozen flights, you fill out a proficiency card, and you get a P2. There is no gear rental fee while you are working on P2, and there are no slots to buy in the plane for yourself, instructors, or coaches. The most complicated sites you need a P3 or P4 to fly, which takes about as much effort as a C or D skydiving license...
I think skydivers could teach a lot of paragliders a thing or to - and the other way around. I am SO thankful I have the cross discipline experience. If any skydiver came up to me and said, “how can I learn to fly my canopy better (not landings) I would say, consider taking paragliding lessons from a school like AirPlay.
There is a medical reason (my knees dislocate when running down hill, thanks DNA) that I quit paragliding. But, I have to say, if I could safely re-enter the sport, I think I would fly a skydiving rig off a mountain for the fun of it. I would have worked with the local club to make it possible, and I would have started with something loaded .75 to 1.
If you want any info about schools, the ratings, where to learn, how to learn, etc - PM me...
Calvin19 0
After 4 years of Hang Gliding and Paragliding, and then getting into BASE, i know a lot of sites that would be perfect for ground launching. But I also know that if any of my old soaring buddies showed up at the site and saw me ground launching my daggar, they would freak. especially at some of the more political sites. (some sites wont even allow paraglider aerobatics) My advice is go talk to some paraglider pilots, be nice, tell them what you want to do, maybe they can recomend a hill thats not so hot. and maybe you can get a huck out of it. (ask, i recomend that) They are all nice people. It is just that their sport has been around so long and is popular enough to have a governing body (USHGA) that works hard to open up perfect launch sites, just like we work hard to keep Bs and As cold and open.
on a different note, for the ground launch junkies, Paraglider canopies are FAR superior to skydiving and base parachutes when it comes to glide, agility, speed, sink rate, precision.(all the things you want in fun ground launching!) This is obviously due to the fact they dont have to OPEN in freefall. I understand a skydiving company is releasing a ground launch canopy. I would be curious to see if they cooperated with paraglider manufacturers. Soon enough we will have special harnesses for drag reduction, (swooping harnesses will be here soon, the body position held by the harness on a skydiving rig looks like it was designed to create drag) and canopies with line so thin it has to be colored to see. and we will have gone in a circle. we will be paragliding. Evolution.
Paragliders can fly at 15 kph or 80 kph. they sink at less than 50meters per minute. I have seen paragliders surf/swoop (toe in the water), no wind for 100 meters. Some manufacturers are experimenting with building canopies with no stitching, and no welding. simply weaving the canopy fabric together. we can learn a lot from paragliders.
-SPACE-
on a different note, for the ground launch junkies, Paraglider canopies are FAR superior to skydiving and base parachutes when it comes to glide, agility, speed, sink rate, precision.(all the things you want in fun ground launching!) This is obviously due to the fact they dont have to OPEN in freefall. I understand a skydiving company is releasing a ground launch canopy. I would be curious to see if they cooperated with paraglider manufacturers. Soon enough we will have special harnesses for drag reduction, (swooping harnesses will be here soon, the body position held by the harness on a skydiving rig looks like it was designed to create drag) and canopies with line so thin it has to be colored to see. and we will have gone in a circle. we will be paragliding. Evolution.
Paragliders can fly at 15 kph or 80 kph. they sink at less than 50meters per minute. I have seen paragliders surf/swoop (toe in the water), no wind for 100 meters. Some manufacturers are experimenting with building canopies with no stitching, and no welding. simply weaving the canopy fabric together. we can learn a lot from paragliders.
-SPACE-
Yeah, I tiptoed around that, but yes, and only in the following circumstances.
The person doing the mentoring must have enough experince, not just in BASE jumping, but also in instructing, so they can present the material on a level the student can understand.
The big trick is varied students need different approaches and it takes years to be able to tell who needs what. Some Mentors in BASE, and many Instructors in Skydiving, will make the mistake of trying to tailor the student to the sport, when you should be tailoring the sport to the student . . .
NickD BASE194
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