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labrys 0
QuoteSafe? No skydive is safe. Some are riskier than others. Seems quite appropriate to me to charge more for a riskier jump.
That's just what I don't understand. I agree that no skydive is safe but I don't get charging students extra to put them in greater danger. There's a weight limit, right? Let's say it's 250 pounds. Tell a student or passenger that they can't skydive if they weigh more. If you think the odds are too high that anyone over 200 will cause problems why the hell are they being accepted?
Who has ever heard this at manifest?
Well... you're going to have to pay extra because your skydive is more likely to result in you or your instructor being injured or killed.
And because I just love to edit:
Where's the discount for really light passengers? Don't they decrease the risk of injury to the instructor?
labrys 0
labrys 0
jtval 0
QuoteIf a 210 pound passenger increases instructor risk over a 200 pound passenger enough to motivate charging them extra money why are they accepted then?
I don't get this idea at all. Isn't a passenger safe to take or not safe to take? What's with the idea that a passenger isn't "as safe" so they have to pay extra?
Edit to add: If it's really increased risk that you're worried about, why aren't you refusing the tandem instead of charging them extra? That smells funny to me.
I amnot an instructor. I dont know if you meant me.
there isn't a higher risk to the student. well, at least there shouldn't be. the weight rating for the tandem rig is the main concern.
the higher risk is to the instructor, my precisely their knees and butt.
IF there is no wind the tandem will slide in. if the student doesnt land properly, which happens on occasion than the instructor has to get there body under the student in order to land smoothly.
if that doesn't happen because the student is too out of shape to do there endof the deal than the instructor getsbeat up.
drags a knee on the ground, gets a foot caught under a 210 lb out of shape person, gets sat on by that person.
in a worst case scenerio (i haven't seen or even heard of it but...) if the student tries to stand up when they arent told to the instructor can be pummeled in a PFL fashion if the student is that much bigger than them.
I have seen a good number of 200-pounders
do tandems with out incident. if the student can over power the instructor there is alwayssome different concerns than taking asmall framed 150pound person.
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Reginald 0
QuoteI don't get this idea at all.
Okay now really slowly...
Do you think a TI landing a 220lb person has a higher risk of injuring his (the TI's) ankle as compared to a landing a 140lb person? Yes or no?
jtval 0
yes the small ones are dangerous but most instructor can over power them and get their legs around the student and hold them in a good arch.
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QuoteI just posted my last reply but I think I may have answered this.
yes the small ones are dangerous but most instructor can over power them and get their legs around the student and hold them in a good arch.
Got first hand experience in this?
So you break your arch to get to the little girls legs that are up on her chest????
...I love this place!
Ron 10
QuoteIf a 210 pound passenger increases instructor risk over a 200 pound passenger enough to motivate charging them extra money why are they accepted then?
Simple. Just jumping carries a certain amount of risk. That risk is increased, and the strain the TI experiences is higher with bigger people.
QuoteI don't get this idea at all. Isn't a passenger safe to take or not safe to take? What's with the idea that a passenger isn't "as safe" so they have to pay extra?
Safe to take or not is not the issue...A super fatty is not going to go with me on a tandem. However, a big person who is fit is not any greater risk of catastrophic failure...But, that extra weight does pose a higher risk, say on landing of them hitting my legs. Would you rather a 10 pound weight get dropped on you, or a 100 pound weight?
QuoteEdit to add: If it's really increased risk that you're worried about, why aren't you refusing the tandem instead of charging them extra? That smells funny to me.
Ever act as a TI? The risk is manageable but there. It is a lot more work to jump with a 240 pounder no matter how fit they are vs a 110 pound person. And safer on landing....I can just stand by my own with a 110 pounder hanging off of me. With a 240 pounder I have to be careful they don't land on me.
Like I asked....Ever been a TI?
jtval 0
When a small girl goes "dead roach" the instructor has to get her legs around hers and make her arch.
true she isnt completely in a 90 degreebody position but I have seen an instructor pull high b/c there wasa small girl putt them in a spin. rather then fight it to the point of extreme danger...PULL.
after that (a line twist or two) the landing is uneventful.
of the bad landings thatI have witnessed I can tell you that mostof them wereout of shape and overweight.
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Ron 10
QuoteRiskier in what sense, do you think? Riskier for the instructor to land, or riskier for equipment to hold up? I'm just curious.
Riskier for the instructor. The equipment question is cut and dry...A rig is rated to a certain suspended weight...One pound over is illegal and most places will not let that happen (and should not).
However, to fly a bigger person it many times requires the TI to be smaller to offset the weight of the passenger (Remember we can't go over a certain weight...so if the gear is rated to say 350 pounds and you weigh 220, then that leaves only 130 pounds available for the Instructor). A bigger person is harder/riskier to the TI than a smaller person.
QuoteLike I asked....Ever been a TI?
No she isn't a TI....BUT she isn't on her claiming she is and handing out advice. She doesn't think the student should pay extra for extra student risk. I agree. As TI's we both know the extra work and the issues on landing. Do you believe that DZ's charge extra *only* because of the extra risk? I have taken 255 lb() AFF students too. I believe they can cause additional problems that I wouldn't give to a new aff I. I didn't get paid extra for the jump and I believe they were a little more at risk on landing than somebody that was 150 lbs. So while I agree that 250lb tandem can cause additional issues and even risk for the I....The extra charge isn't because of the additional liability to the dz of taking the student.
I don't agree. The idea that it's harder work for the instructor and more fuel for the plane makes sense. The idea that it's more risk is not okay with me. If the risk is so great then I don't understand why the skydive would happen.
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