ajay 1 #1 October 22, 2016 Hey guys, quick question, is there anything inherently wrong with having the RSL on the outside of the riser? Apart from adjusting EP drills and ensuring the routing is correct, is it ok? I did a quick search but couldn't really find much info... Cheers blank Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
skytribe 17 #2 October 22, 2016 It should be done as the manufacturer has it configured. Thats how it was tested. I think the vast majority have the RSL on the inside of the riser so that the RSL does not need to go over or under the reserve risers. I can only think of one manufacturer that has the RSL ring on the outside of the main riser. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Iwan 47 #3 October 22, 2016 Are you sure that risers are original? Some manufacturers have RSL on left, some on right side. If you have different risers and you are using left, for the right side then the ring for connector could be outside Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Deimian 43 #4 October 22, 2016 Yep, that can happen if you use normal risers on a rig with collins lanyard and viceversa. You'll be using the left group of risers on the right side, or the other way around. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ChrisHoward 8 #5 October 22, 2016 skytribeI think the vast majority have the RSL on the inside of the riser so that the RSL does not need to go over or under the reserve risers. An RSL should never pass under the reserve risers. At best it will prevent it from functioning correctly, the scenarios get worse from there. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jumpsalot-2 3 #6 October 22, 2016 There are riser sets that are built with an RSL ring on each riser set. Then you always have a ring to the inside.Life is short ... jump often. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pchapman 279 #7 October 22, 2016 I see the 'outside RSL ring' issue from time to time. I don't recall any rigger or anyone objecting and forcing the jumper to buy new risers. But it is a visual distraction ('Is that right? Is that routed right?') and the jumper has to be very careful about the routing of the RSL webbing. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Bob_Church 7 #8 October 22, 2016 I'd have an rsl on my rig of the manufacturers would just add a small loop for connecting it when you don't want to use it. If I'm doing CReW I don't want it connected, but I don't want it flapping around either. There should be someplace to attach it when not connected. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
skytribe 17 #9 October 23, 2016 If your not using the RSL then simply unhook it from the riser ring and connection it to the cutaway housing instead. As the DZ rigger to show you if you dont understand. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ajay 1 #10 October 23, 2016 IwanAre you sure that risers are original? Some manufacturers have RSL on left, some on right side. If you have different risers and you are using left, for the right side then the ring for connector could be outside Yeah that's basically what's going on. Pretty sure they're vector risers but on a G4, puts the ring on the outside left as opposed to the inside right. It's not being jumped yet and I have mirage risers organised. Obviously factory spec, as tested is a more fail safe route, but I was just more interested in the RSL being outside causing problems you otherwise wouldn't face if it were on the inside.blank Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
riggerrob 643 #11 October 23, 2016 Racer risers have RSL rings on both sides. When I worked at Square One we had dozens of rental rigs and canopies. To eliminate compatibility hassles, we installed Racer risers with mini rings on rental harnesses with large rings (RW-1). Outboard RSL rings slightly increase the risk of accidental snagging and pulling the reserve ripcord prematurely ..... slightly. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
betzilla 56 #12 October 24, 2016 You would probably do well to have a rigger take a look for you and make sure all the routings are such that it will function correctly. Better yet, a skilled master rigger can install a ring on the other riser (so it'll be inboard on the correct side - then you can use those risers with any make of rig). It would be worth the $$ and downtime to do so if the risers are in otherwise good shape. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
councilman24 37 #13 October 24, 2016 You can also add a ring that requires no sewing on the riser. Ring on a loop of small webbing larks headed onto bottom of riser where riser large ring goes through. This is Ray Farrell's field approval for a RSL on anything. Value of this? Back when we had risers break no matter where they broke this ring would be left behind and not fire RSL. Not an issue lately. http://www.actionair.com/Rigging.htmlI'm old for my age. Terry Urban D-8631 FAA DPRE Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites