winsor 236
QuoteThis is not always the case. Both times I saw people have cypres fires the cypres had beat them by a split second.
Think about this, you are travelling 175 ft per sec.
Your cypres first and you stop 100 ft above the ground. I have seen a person get line stretch at 50ft, get a 4 second canopy ride, and gripe about how "he was about to...".
My reserve opens a lot faster than a lot of mains.
If dump your main at the exact instant that your cypres fired, your main would have not opened in time.
The jumper who was "about to" was about to die. They were too late and would have died.
30 days and a talk with an S&TA before re-instatement is an excellent idea.
Quote
I still do...several times in fact while walking to the plane...
But you will be surprised what happens when you get 100,200,500,1000 jumps...You get complacency that grows. And THAT is what kills you. Over confidence brought on by never having a problem before.
110% agree, as a pilot and master scuba diver, I have seen it over and over complancency killsQuoteEveryone I jump with says my hard deck is too high (3500'), I say to them, "Im just giving you more clear air" Its my comfort range and besides, I like the ride :)
Good for you!...Do you think you are going to keep that hard deck for the next 1,000 jumps?
My safty and life for a few extra seconds of freefall?, yes, I can say I will still pull higher then everyone else. Besides, I like the ride :)
"Also I heard the voice of the Lord saying who shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, here am I, send me."
MWGemini 0
Not to mention the fact that I only jump on weekends, so I would be grounded for a week anyways, while waiting for a new cutter and repack, if not longer.
Edit: Not only should you be grounded, but your first jump (or first several) back should be monitored by a USPA coach or higher, IMO.
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Ron 10
I still do...several times in fact while walking to the plane...
But you will be surprised what happens when you get 100,200,500,1000 jumps...You get complacency that grows. And THAT is what kills you. Over confidence brought on by never having a problem before.
Very few people think they are gonna die...But every year people do.
Good for you!...Do you think you are going to keep that hard deck for the next 1,000 jumps?
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winsor 236
I have been impressed with how well the S&TA network can work with things like this.
Some time back someone misbehaved at Raeford, and Gene Paul Thacker grounded the hell out of him. Knowing that all he had to do was find another drop zone, he said fine and left.
It turns out that he was unable to get in the air at Chester, North Raleigh or Barnwell, since the principals there checked the guy's bona fides before letting him jump. The bottom line was that if Gene Paul says you're grounded, you're grounded.
There may be competition between DZs on one level, but there tends to be cooperation on an operational basis. Even if two DZs are competing fiercely for business, my experience is that the word of the S&TA at one is taken seriously by the other. If a call comes in regarding a questionable jumper, information provided that they are an incident waiting to happen is taken seriously.
Some things slip through the cracks, but this sport is a particularly small community and you tend to earn the reputation that follows you around.
Blue skies,
Winsor
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