skydude2000 3 #1 October 12, 2007 Hi all, This may have been asked before, but I did a search & came up with nothing. I asked one of my instructors, and either he mis-understood me, or I mis-understood him. I'm trying to find the exact requirements for the 5 jumps in the 2-way relative work endorsement for the CSPA 'A' CoP. #1 is pins, #2 is levels, I'm guessing #3 is both together. What are the last two? Thanks, Skydude.PULL!! or DIE!! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kittikat 0 #2 October 12, 2007 There is no other requirements - there are three jumps working on pins and levels because it usually takes people at least three to put it all together and demonstrate everything in one jump. By the last jump you will need to demonstrate a stable (freeflown) exit, four pins with levels, altitude awareness, breakoff and an adequate track for 2-way separation. That is just the in-air portion. Some C2's modify this slightly, but this is basically what CSPA expects. Good luck with them! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
imdskydiver 0 #3 October 12, 2007 Here is some info , Check it out for yourself : http://blueplanetweb.ca/cspa/cspa/en/cwc/relativework.htm#2wayrw Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pchapman 279 #4 October 12, 2007 [Note: Thread applies to CANADA] I'd go right to the CSPA's Coaching Working Committee (CWC) site. The page is http://www.cspa.ca/cwc/relativework.htm It is a little confusing that some of the best stuff on the CSPA site is "hidden" under the CWC section. CoP study guides and info on all Endorsements are at the CWC site. The blueplanetweb site mentioned in post #3 seems to be a development site for the CWC stuff?? The page mentioned is almost identical but bit shorter than the one I mentioned. I can't tell which site would be most up to date at any given time, but the official one would be the CWC one. So the CWC page on the 2 way RW endorsement does list what is to be done on the minimum five jumps. However, the list still still requires some interpretation by an instructor. At my DZ (the 'other Toronto one') we've got charts for this sort of thing, taking the CSPA guidelines as a starting point to create a curriculum. Spread the word about the CWC site -- it isn't perfect but is useful and not as widely known as it should be! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites