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Same with the Vigils, but these should be turned off prior to boarding the vehicle
Why, they aren't putting them in the trunk.
"What if there were no hypothetical questions?"
piisfish 140
you obviously did not RTFM (or you didnt understand it). Hint : Page 18 from Cypres2 manualQuoteIt wouldn't be *wrong*. It just means that your AAD is likely set to fire 130 ft (~40 meters).
scissors beat paper, paper beat rock, rock beat wingsuit - KarlM
piisfish 140
no need for a trunk, page 21 of the Vigil ManualQuoteQuote
Same with the Vigils, but these should be turned off prior to boarding the vehicle
Why, they aren't putting them in the trunk.
Quoteyou must switch OFF your Vigil before travelling in a closed vehicle
OK, the vehicle at that DZ might not be closed... my possible wrong.
But it would still have to be turned OFF/ON again at airport altitude (page12)
scissors beat paper, paper beat rock, rock beat wingsuit - KarlM
pchapman 279
Quoteyou obviously did not RTFM (or you didnt understand it). Hint : Page 18 from Cypres2 manualQuoteIt wouldn't be *wrong*. It just means that your AAD is likely set to fire 130 ft (~40 meters).
The manual does say "When the takeoff airfield and intended dropzone are in different locations, CYPRES
must be switched on at the departure airfield."
But it does not say WHY. Will the Cypres catch fire? I don't think so. Will the calibration be either that of the DZ where the Cypres was turned on, or possibly the airfield one drove to, depending on the time and rate of altitude change involved? Yes, sounds like one of these will be the case, and with the airfield higher than the DZ, 130' may be an acceptable offset.
So the interpretation of "you must do something" depends on what your goal is, and what the consequences are.
Divalent has contacted Airtec who seem to have said that he could just leave the Cypres on. So while it is good to have a careful reading of the manual, in this case the information from the company EXPANDS ON what the manual says, which also means that it CONTRADICTS what is in the manual.
This is an interesting case where the manual is right in a sense but does not cover all possible reasonable courses of action. The manual does give a method that takes a little more time but makes it unambiguous what altitude the AAD is set to.
Divalent sees everyone else just leaving their AAD on and happens to go a little further in investigating the situation, so he's the one dealing with the arguments...
Divalent 137
Quoteyou obviously did not RTFM (or you didnt understand it). Hint : Page 18 from Cypres2 manualQuoteIt wouldn't be *wrong*. It just means that your AAD is likely set to fire 130 ft (~40 meters).
Well, I think pchapman responded on point to this. I'll just note that the general recommendation to recycle and put in an offset at the take-off point whenever the elevations differ has to have some practical limits which take into account the magnitude and direction of the difference, the reasons for doing it, and the effort to do so.
A 20 ft difference either direction I don't think anyone would worry about. A 130 ft higher airport (as we have at the Farm) looks like it gives you two acceptable choices: you can either recycle and offset, or accept that the trigger altitude is raised by ~130 ft. But 130 ft in the lower direction, you might want to recycle and offset (unless your are comfortable with a 620 ft trigger altitude).
billvon 3,008
>The manual does say "When the takeoff airfield and intended dropzone are in
>different locations, CYPRES must be switched on at the departure airfield."
We called Airtec specifically on this when we jumped at Brown (road between DZ and airport about 150 feet higher) and they said we did not need to cycle AAD's in that case. It's worth a call to Airtec to see what they say in this case,
>different locations, CYPRES must be switched on at the departure airfield."
We called Airtec specifically on this when we jumped at Brown (road between DZ and airport about 150 feet higher) and they said we did not need to cycle AAD's in that case. It's worth a call to Airtec to see what they say in this case,
QuoteIt's worth a call to Airtec to see what they say in this case,
Which has already been done by Div as noted upthread.
My reality and yours are quite different.
I think we're all Bozos on this bus.
Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239
I think we're all Bozos on this bus.
Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239
It is not a large difference, and as I said, given the presences of some hills nearby that are close to that elevation, it might even be desirable.
The main point is, I think, that jumpers should be aware of this and (if they don't recycle at the airport and set a negative offset) plan their jump and behavior around this higher trigger level.
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