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skydivermom

Spotting skills

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Also the only demo I ever landed out on was a mock HALO insertion for the military out of a C-130. We let the Airforces cool wizbang system (much better than anything civilians have) determine the release point for the operation. Its called HARP (High Altitude Release Point) and it takes a computer, a guy trained to use that computer and ALL off the flight information such as winds at different altitudes..And mixes it all up and spits out a release point.



bah - bet it was running Windows NT. With one of those pentiums that couldn't do floating point.

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Boy, it's interesting to see the turns these threads take. Still, some VERY interesting info. on spotting and GPS.

Well, I did get to spot this weekend, and I landed about 10 feet from my intended target. Don't know if it was dumb luck or not, but I was happy with it. I in no way believe I am an EXPERT on spotting, but I do have the general idea and will practice it as much as I can for as long as I can.

I suppose I have the same issue with packing. At my small dz/club, you pack your own stuff. Once I move to San Marcos, I COULD pay a packer, and I might do that sometimes. For the most part, though, I will pack my own rig.

Anyway, as I stated before, my desire is not just to learn to spot to get licensed...I want to get really good at it. And as for the suggestion to go to a different dz...I understand that, but it's not like there's a dropzone on every corner, so I guess I will just have to do the best I can. If anyone from San Marcos could get in on this I would really appreciate it.

Again, thanks for all the great discussions about this.
Mrs. WaltAppel

All things work together for good to them that love God...Romans 8:28

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You are the one saying GPS can spot, not me. I am saying GPS can tell you where you
are.



Ah, yeah. So you let the GPS tell you where you are...what is that if its not letting it spot for
you?


So you think that all you need to know to spot is to know where you are. Strange way to spot in my opinion.
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I never said I let the pilot spot, I let the pilot tell me where I am. Actually the
pilots at my DZ are rather surprised when I tell them that I determine the spot.




That whole paragraph tells me that they think they are spotting. I mean if they were surprized then
that means they think they were spotting.



Which indeed they were at other DZ's, but not at mine
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I've seen some real disasters with people who are not pilots trying to direct a plane to the
DZ at 14000ft using sight only.



And I have seen some real disasters when the skydivers think the pilot can do a better job.



If your pilot does not know where his aircraft is at any moment in time, I suggest you find a better pilot.
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I am going to trust GPS over anyones eyes to tell me if the plane is 0.2 miles before the DZ
or 0.3 miles before the DZ. Before you put words into my mouth, that does not mean I will not bother
to check with my eyes that the DZ is there underneath me before I jump.



Great, so you look out the door, but trust the GPS over you. That *is* letting the GPS spot dude.



I suppose you think your eyesight is more accurate than GPS. Dunno why the U.S. miltary spent so much money on GPS, they could have just asked you, dude.
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You are living in a dream world if you expect skydivers with a few hundred jumps to be able
to ...
1) look out of an aircraft at 14000ft and determine what their freefall drift will be when falling
2) what the winds are at opening altitude.
3) where they are to the nearest 0.5 of a mile from the DZ
4) know the direction the plane is flying to within 30°
5) and finally have any idea how much ground speed the plane has to within a 20 kt margin of error.



Never said Expect them to do it...I said LEARN to do it. You and your GPS love will not teach them
anything more than to turn into lemming when they see a green light.

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1) look out of an aircraft at 14000ft and determine what their freefall drift will be when
falling
2) what the winds are at opening altitude



Thats why you look out the door on the ride to altitude.
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So you can tell wind direct and speed at all heights by looking out of the window on climb to altitude? Someone would have to be delusional to believe that.



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3) where they are to the nearest 0.5 of a mile from the DZ
4) know the direction the plane is flying to within 30°
5) and finally have any idea how much ground speed the plane has to within a 20 kt margin of error.



They don't need to know any of that. It does not matter if they are .5 or .6. All that matters is
they know if they can make the DZ. The distance, angle, or ground speed is not needed information.
Only knowing if they can make the DZ.



So now wind is irrelevant to the spot :S It getting even more wierd.
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The spot at our DZ is determined on the ground before anyone has jumped. If it's wrong, it's
usually because some smart ass who thought they could spot has decided not to go when the green
light came on



Or, some smart ass on the ground thought the pilot knew more than he did and lept out like a trained
seal on the green light.

You keep saying you spot, but then claim the GPS is so much better than you. Its pretty funny to see
you claim you spot, then everything you say after that is giving the spot to the pilot.

Do you think on a demo into the middle of a city the jumpers spot the plane themselves, or do you
think the pilot uses GPS to fly to a point over the ground?

*hint I have a PRO rating and have over 100 live demos and well over 500 training jumps for those
demos...And not once did the pilot do anything but point the nose into the wind at altitude. and
then take directions from the jumpers.
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I don't know what you have to do to get a pro rating in the U.S. but here in Germany you would not get a license if you thought wind had nothing to do with the spot



Also the only demo I ever landed out on was a mock HALO insertion for the military out of a C-130. We let the Airforces cool wizbang system (much better than anything civilians have) determine the release point for the operation. Its called HARP (High Altitude Release Point) and it takes a computer, a guy trained to use that computer and ALL off the flight information such as winds at different altitudes..And mixes it all up and spits out a release point.

We missed. So much for the Armys cool toys huh? But I guess yours are better.

I'm done here. Keep doing what you ahve been if it makes you happy. But I would rather people learn
to spot.

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I bet you are one of those jumpers that thinks an altimeter is just a cool toy as well and tell people to use their eyes.

Dave

Fallschirmsport Marl

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...You are living in a dream world if you expect skydivers with a few hundred jumps to be able to ...
1) look out of an aircraft at 14000ft and determine what their freefall drift will be when falling
2) what the winds are at opening altitude.
3) where they are to the nearest 0.5 of a mile from the DZ
4) know the direction the plane is flying to within 30°
5) and finally have any idea how much ground speed the plane has to within a 20 kt margin of error.



If we teach them, then yes, I would expect all that.
Does your DZ not teach spotting?
Does your DZ not let the learners practice under supervision?
What do you do when you get a pilot that doesn't know or screws up on GPS.

I get the feeling that you are definitely one of those who depends on the pilot to put you near the DZ and you only stick your head out to look for air traffic or clouds. No? then I simply do not get it why you are arguing with Ron....what he is saying is spot on .

*sigh*
My reality and yours are quite different.
I think we're all Bozos on this bus.
Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239

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I had to come back for this.

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If your pilot does not know where his aircraft is at any moment in time, I suggest you find a better pilot.....I don't know what you have to do to get a pro rating in the U.S. but here in Germany you would not get a license if you thought wind had nothing to do with the spot



For the record, not only do I have a PRO rating and 100 "no shit" live demos....But I ALSO have a pilots license. :o

Add that to 2000 more jumps than you, several instructor ratings, AND 8 years more in the sport than you...I guess you are right...I know nothing about the sport, spotting, or anything to do with aircraft compared to you.....:S:o


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I bet you are one of those jumpers that thinks an altimeter is just a cool toy as well and tell people to use their eyes.



Yep altemeters fail. But I guess if yours does break you will bounce since your love of instruments will not let you pull when your eyes tell you that you are low:ph34r::ph34r::ph34r:

*I* would rather a person know that if it looks like he is gonna bounce to do something about it, and not to just blindly trust a device is always correct and wait till his goggles fill with blood.

Your willingness to trust everything but you is AMAZING! A real testament to device dependancy.
"No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms." -- Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson Papers, 334

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Well, I did get to spot this weekend, and I landed about 10 feet from my intended target



Good keep it up.

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I suppose I have the same issue with packing. At my small dz/club, you pack your own stuff. Once I move to San Marcos, I COULD pay a packer, and I might do that sometimes. For the most part, though, I will pack my own rig.



Good idea, people who pack know more about their gear than others who don't. They also can spot problems sooner.

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Again, thanks for all the great discussions about this



Thanks for asking a good question and following through on the advice given. Learn to spot and you will be a better jumper than the "green light go" crowd.

BTW sorrry about the BS here...I don't know why some just have to argue, and I don't know why I bother trying to debate those folks.
"No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms." -- Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson Papers, 334

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For the record, not only do I have a PRO rating and 100 "no shit" live demos....But I ALSO have a pilots license. Shocked

Add that to 2000 more jumps than you, several instructor ratings, AND 8 years more in the sport than you...I guess you are right...I know nothing about the sport, spotting, or anything to do with aircraft compared to you.....CrazyShocked



Wow, Here is the first sign that you are running out from arguments.

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I had to come back for this.

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If your pilot does not know where his aircraft is at any moment in time, I suggest you find a better pilot.....I don't know what you have to do to get a pro rating in the U.S. but here in Germany you would not get a license if you thought wind had nothing to do with the spot



For the record, not only do I have a PRO rating and 100 "no shit" live demos....But I ALSO have a pilots license. :o

Add that to 2000 more jumps than you, several instructor ratings, AND 8 years more in the sport than you...I guess you are right...I know nothing about the sport, spotting, or anything to do with aircraft compared to you.....:S:o

Then you should know that know the wind speed and direction is required to determine the spot and to find that spot at 14000ft GPS is more accurate than eyesight.
Why is it so dangerous to use GPS as an aid to determine when to leave the aircraft. Do you ignore the all the instruments in your aircraft on when your are flying? They might fail Ron.
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I bet you are one of those jumpers that thinks an altimeter is just a cool toy as well and tell people to use their eyes.



Yep altemeters fail. But I guess if yours does break you will bounce since your love of instruments will not let you pull when your eyes tell you that you are low:ph34r::ph34r::ph34r:



Guess what Ron, I would guess that you are going to bounce because of your hatred of instruments. Your altimeter will read 1000 ft and you will think, it's broke, thats at least 3000 ft by my eyesight. Only this time your altimeter isn't broke;)


*I* would rather a person know that if it looks like he is gonna bounce to do something about it, and not to just blindly trust a device is always correct and wait till his goggles fill with blood.



and I would rather someone who is prepared to accept that altimeter can fail and eyes can deceive. Oh, I forgot , you've got a PRO rating and hundreds of demos, your eyes are more accurate than GPS at 14000 ft. Of course, ignore the altimeter reading, trust your eyes. Guess you don't bother wearing an altimeter at all
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Your willingness to trust everything but you is AMAZING! A real testament to device dependancy.





Your willingness to ignore everything but your eyes is amazing. I can hear the conversation now.
"Why did you have a cypres fire Ron?"
Answer, "Yeah well my altimeter read 1000 ft, my protrack was beeping like shit, but hell, it looked more like 3000ft."

Smart move Ron, smart move;)
Dave

Fallschirmsport Marl

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There are some people that think just because they can get 4 people out a C182 at 9000 ft and they all land in the DZ they can spot.

What théy are really doing is making a very rough guess at where to get out of the aircraft.

When you need to get 20 people in multiple groups out of an otter at 14000 ft with the correct exit seperation then I am going to use all the tools I can to make sure all 20 get back to the landing area. If that means using GPS to start the jump run at 0.5 mile before the DZ then so be it. I know that if I let the majority of jumpers decide when they exit, we would have a fuckup at least every other load.

I have tried to teach people how to spot and unless you stay with Rons "look out of the door and guess" their eyes glaze over. They don't want to know about freefall drift, wind speeds and direction, wind shear, forward throw, etc.

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I get the feeling that you are definitely one of those who depends on the pilot to put you near the DZ and you only stick your head out to look for air traffic or clouds.


And your pilot has no clue how to find the DZ?

Here is some interesting information for you. I can only direct our pilots during the last 2 miles of run in to the DZ. Otherwise I cannot tell the pilot where to fly. ATC tells the pilot where to fly and if he does not follow their orders he's in big trouble. Do you not think it would be wise for me to tell the pilot which direction I would like to run in before we are at altitude?
Dave

Fallschirmsport Marl

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There are some people that think just because they can get 4 people out a C182 at 9000 ft and they all land in the DZ they can spot.




First of all its high time to take spotting in 2 parts: planning and executing.

I think executing is quite the same in every case: check the position and vector of the plane and recognize the right spot to start jumping.

Planing can be simple if jumping with a C182 or complex like a big jumpship.

You can expect skills if those are practiced regularly.
Spotting is a duty of that person choosen by the manifest in our club. He/she usually is choosen, because he/she is the most experienced in that load.

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What théy are really doing is making a very rough guess at where to get out of the aircraft.



Why? Spot is not a single point, but an area that you have a really high probability to get back to the choosen landing area even under reserve, shape and position is depending on the winds.

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In your case I don't think you guess because you mentioned the planning aspect of spotting. Also you mentioned in an earlier post about determining the spot on the ground. I like the planning then executing method.

That is better than trying to collect the neccessary information on the climb to altitude, having a pilot that does not know where he is, then looking out of the door and saying "I think we'll get back, lets jump."
Dave

Fallschirmsport Marl

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That is better than trying to collect the neccessary information on the climb to altitude, having a pilot that does not know where he is, then looking out of the door and saying "I think we'll get back, lets jump."



I don't think that everone is boarding the plane without any knowledge of the winds.

Or if we don't have info about winds we throw a streamer on climbing at 600m over the landing area.

I know there are more interesing situations like operation on flied A and plane has to be on flied B about 50kms away .... so lets jump there...no streamer...stop from something....

I have not been in these kind of loads, but I had chance to be there. I said no, because other reasons.

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You are living in a dream world if you expect skydivers with a few hundred jumps to be able to ...
1) look out of an aircraft at 14000ft and determine what their freefall drift will be when falling
2) what the winds are at opening altitude.
3) where they are to the nearest 0.5 of a mile from the DZ
4) know the direction the plane is flying to within 30°
5) and finally have any idea how much ground speed the plane has to within a 20 kt margin of error.

I started jumping when most people had rounds. We had Otters in Houston, and we managed to put all of the people on the DZ, spotting. I.e. looking down, giving corrections to the pilot, and getting out at the right time. Sometimes there were go-arounds for multiple groups (all groups were belly fliers or AFF). But not that many people had thousands of jumps.

Spotting is important, and a GPS will tell you exactly where you are. But a GPS is not essential. Looking outside is essential, particularly if a wind streamer hasn't been thrown in the morning.

How many times have you heard something like "the pilot has been turning in short on jump run all day."

Wendy W.
There is nothing more dangerous than breaking a basic safety rule and getting away with it. It removes fear of the consequences and builds false confidence. (tbrown)

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I don't think that everone is boarding the plane without any knowledge of the winds.



When I said
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3) where they are to the nearest 0.5 of a mile from the DZ
4) know the direction the plane is flying to within 30°
5) and finally have any idea how much ground speed the plane has to within a 20 kt margin of error.



Note that ground speed is a pretty good indication of winds at altitude.

Ron said
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They don't need to know any of that. It does not matter if they are .5 or .6. All that matters is
they know if they can make the DZ. The distance, angle, or ground speed is not needed information.
Only knowing if they can make the DZ.



Now I ask myself, how the fuck can they know if they can make the DZ when they have no knowledge of the winds?
Dave

Fallschirmsport Marl

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Note that ground speed is a pretty good indication of winds at altitude



My jump numbers arent high , but if I were to go by this, two weeks ago at sebastian, who knows where I would have ended up. The uppers were 100 per the board and ground were 11 ... Id think that most people would be wise to verify the speeds of the winds with other sources if they are available...
Sudsy Fist: i don't think i'd ever say this
Sudsy Fist: but you're looking damn sudsydoable in this

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I suppose you think your eyesight is more accurate than GPS



***

I can get just about as close...here's how, may give some food for thought.

Find out how long the runway is.
Convert that measurement in feet to miles, this gives you a 'key' scale...like on a map in terms of 'inches to miles'.

Either ask the pilot, or call flight service and get the winds aloft...now you have an idea as to the freefall drift to expect.

On a sunny day, if I'm spotting I can pretty accurately tell 1/2 way up if there will be clouds at or near the exit point when we get to altitude...

Check your altimeter going through the cloud base and figure out approximately what direction and speed they are moving using the winds aloft numbers...
from the 'time of day' or angle the sun is relative to the horizon, you can figure out how the cloud shadows on the ground relate to the actual position of the clouds making them.

Looking down at the LZ, draw an imaginary jump run line and see if there are any shadows on that line and if so...how many 'runway' lengths 'upwind' are they.

We were doing a demo a couple months ago here in Houston, there was a lot of discussion about staying below the clouds and doing a hop n pop low show, or going high and 'hope' for a hole at the designated jump time. I said go high...in ten minutes there will be a 'hole' right over the LZ...and there was.

Spotting is both art and science, and like any skill, has to be constantly practiced in order to stay sharp.

A GPS is a useful tool, just like an AAD or an Altimeter...but I always rely on my own abilities first.










~ If you choke a Smurf, what color does it turn? ~

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BTW sorrry about the BS here...I don't know why some just have to argue, and I don't know why I bother trying to debate those folks.



As you should be. Who do you think you are trying to disseminate good safety information. You should be ashamed of yourself trying to help skydivers live to jump another day. ;)

I would be very curious how many participants of this thread could, given an aerial map of a strange drop zone, runway length, a winds aloft report, the air velocity (speed & direction) of the plane on jump run, and a round parachute could spot themselves and land in their intended landing area.

My guess is without that pretty green light, quite a few would have a long walk back to the packing hangar.

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I have tried to teach people how to spot and unless you stay with Rons "look out of the door and guess" their eyes glaze over. They don't want to know about freefall drift, wind speeds and direction, wind shear, forward throw, etc.



I must have missed where Ron said "look out the door and guess." Could you please link to that post?

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given an aerial map of a strange drop zone, runway length, a winds aloft report, the air velocity (speed & direction) of the plane on jump run,


Which is all good stuff.:)
Ron says (Post #75 )
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They don't need to know any of that. It does not matter if they are .5 or .6. All that matters is
they know if they can make the DZ. The distance, angle, or ground speed is not needed information.
Only knowing if they can make the DZ.


That to me is looking out of the door and guessing.

But no one reads anything posted here really :|
Dave

Fallschirmsport Marl

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***I have tried to teach people how to spot and unless you stay with Rons "look out of the door and guess" their eyes glaze over. They don't want to know about freefall drift, wind speeds and direction, wind shear, forward throw, etc.

__________________________________________________

I think I am in a minority because I am interested in that information. I actually want to learn how to do this and do it well. Equipment does fail and you can't rely soley on it. Early on under canopy, I made myself learn how to tell if I was going up or downwind without looking at the windsock. That served me well when I had my first off-landing and couldn't see the windsock. I still landed right on the windline. Of course I still look at the windsock, but I know I'm not totally dependant on it. That's how I would like to eventually be with spotting skills. I want the satisfaction of knowing I CAN do it...and of course it could save my life.
Mrs. WaltAppel

All things work together for good to them that love God...Romans 8:28

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I think I am in a minority because I am interested in that information.


Excellent! Keep up the practice and interest.

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I actually want to learn how to do this and do it well


Great! Here is a link to some stuff from John Kallend Skydiving resources. The "Powerpoint presentation on exit safety with freefall sim" is very interesting. There is something about spotting in there as well. Don't forget to talk to your instructors about what you read just incase you misunderstand any of it.

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That served me well when I had my first off-landing and couldn't see the windsock.



Glad to see you are heads up about landing your canopy. Why did you land off though? Wansn't a spotting error I hope ;)
Dave

Fallschirmsport Marl

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***Why did you land off though? Wansn't a spotting error I hope


__________________________________________________
It was actually pretty funny. The spot was great...the jm put me directly over the airport because we all got out at 4200. I did not pull stable so had to deal with line twists, by the time I found the dz, I was too far to the right to make it back. No big deal, I just picked a nice big field full of cows to land in. I loved how they all stared at me when I landed:)
Mrs. WaltAppel

All things work together for good to them that love God...Romans 8:28

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