Main-Reserve Entanglement/Unintentional Water Landing: Lessons Learned
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NWFlyer, in Safety and Training
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My point is that not all mals are "by the book" and you were able to work with what you had without panic. Thanks for that.
I think we're all Bozos on this bus.
Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239
moonglo 0
QuoteExcept for wingsuiting I use an RSL, so no matter how fast I am one handed or two handed, the RSL will beat me.
Sorry for the hijack, but why not use an RSL for wingsuiting? I've seen 2 wingsuit malfunctions now where the jumper was saved by their RSL- they were spinning on their backs and the relative wind was blowing their wings over their handles, and the legwing was inflated adding to the spin!
That was enough for me to consider adding an RSL or Skyhook to my next rig now that I started jumping a larger wingsuit (V-1).
Good job NW Flyer!! Thanks for sharing and glad you're ok
Bolas 5
Something to think about.
If ya can't be good, look good, if that fails, make 'em laugh.
NWFlyer 2
QuoteThat is the coolest part about our sub-culture, good people all over the place. The difference between that and “Arm Chair Quarterbacking” is this – How many armchair quarterbacks played in the NFL, or for that matter past JV in high school? I would suspect probably not many but when receiving critique’s in the skydiving arena, sure you have to take it with a grain of salt but the advice usually comes from a source that has had some level of experience in the game and ego’s aside really just want to share their knowledge and experience with others so they don’t end up in the incident report. It’s like a big family of people who probably would not typically mix.
I've been thinking a lot about this statement and I think you're both right and wrong. In this sport, it is definitely very easy (especially at my experience level where almost everyone has more experience than me) to get analysis from the "experts." Carrying your analogy forward, it'd be like I'm the JV quarterback getting advice from Peyton Manning... except I can find Peyton by the beer fridge and online, etc., without having to work too hard or go through his "people" to get to him.
The flip side is that I think there are a lot of very experienced people in this sport who, either through pure luck or pure skill (or a combination of both) who haven't been in situations where shit hit the fan or didn't go as planned, so they don't really know how they'll react.
One of the more memorable conversations I've had in this sport was with a well-respected jumper at a local DZ, after she had her first cutaway ever at 1400ish jumps. She said (I'm paraphrasing here) "I was really pleased to see that I reacted exactly as I had trained; as much as you practice and train you don't know how it's going to go till you're there." It's all well and good to talk about couldas and shouldas and wouldas before or after the fact, but there was only one person under my canopy that day.
Doesn't mean that the armchair quarterbacks don't provide value, just that they weren't there. I find myself doing the same thing sometimes when I read about incidents (both fatal and non-fatal). I find myself thinking "Well, I wouldn't do that" but do I really know? No.
Edited to note that I'm not a huge football fan, so let's not get into the debate of whether Peyton Manning was the right name to use in my analogy. Save that for the Bonfire!
tbrown 26
QuoteI'll say it again..Krisanne you handled a bad situation well given all that went on.
My point is that not all mals are "by the book" and you were able to work with what you had without panic. Thanks for that.
At least there weren't any sharks in the water....
Your humble servant.....Professor Gravity !
NWFlyer 2
Quote
At least there weren't any sharks in the water....
Well, unless you count all the whuffo guys who came out to help me ... they were probably hoping for the special view that only a wet shirt can provide.
champu 1
QuoteThis is a great idea! I haven't used cleaning my cutaway cables as an opportunity to practice my pulling my cutaway cable (with the RSL disconnected, of course!)
Why do you care if your RSL is disconnected or not if you're standing on the ground with your main in your rig?
QuoteA brake that fired is perfectly fixable by yanking on a rear riser until you have enough time to release the still stowed brake.
Don't count on being able to stop the spin from a toggle fire by pulling on the rear riser of the unstowed side. It may work, or it may do nothing and feel like pulling on a wet noodle. Your best bet is just to pop the other break.
QuotePEEL, then pull. My first mal I had a hardish pull. I thought ,"Oh, what the hell?!?!?!?!?" And I applied massive power to the handle and I felt the velcro rip. At that point I realized that the velco was holding it in, not a hard pull.
Same thing happened to me using one hand on each. I tried to pull cutaway and it went nowhere. So I reached over with my other hand, did two hands on the cutaway, held onto the handle witih my right hand and grabbed my reserve handle with just my left hand and pulled.
I was actually kinda surprised I did that, it was definitely not something I practiced.
NWFlyer 2
QuoteWhy do you care if your RSL is disconnected or not if you're standing on the ground with your main in your rig?
Probably not an issue, you're right, but I often clean my cables before I pack so my main is already out and I'd hate to have the riser dropping to the floor pull the RSL with it. Probably too gentle a force to do it but just in case ...
Be safe
Ed
www.PrecisionSkydiving.com
I definitely see your point there; the landing area can be very distracting. But it's such habit at this point that I probably won't stop doing field stowing, I will just add check points into the process; when I lay my rig down, when I'm stowing the risers. I like the field-packing technique, though I often find when I'm running my fingers up the lines I end up unstowing and restowing anyway because I have to take out twists.
Well, damn, I think that might be one of the nicest things anyone's ever said about me. In a dark, skydiving humor sort of way, anyway.
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