slotperfect 7 #51 April 25, 2006 You just cross your arms, grab your risers in opposite hands, and turn yourself around. Long pre-breathes and HAHOs - you gotta do what you gotta do! Arrive Safely John Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
steveorino 7 #52 April 25, 2006 Jay is former SF. He can do anything De Oppresso Liber, Jay! steveOrino Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Beverly 1 #53 April 25, 2006 We did something similar a few years ago. There were four of us and we were attempting to do 100 skydives each within a 12 hour period. We were relatively low jump numbers and definately not fit enough! We started at 0600 with some low cloud and rain. 5 rigs each, around 2.5 minutes from wheels up to wheels down. One porter JM's in the plane despatching us and checking our gear etc people catching us and getting us out of and back into harnesses. About a 4/5 sec delay leaving the aeroplane. We finished with around 4 minutes to spare to the sound of the "final countdown" blaring from the radio and the best sunset I have seen in a while. Also a charity event. It was wicked. I think true friendship is under-rated Twitter: @Dreamskygirlsa Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ScottyInAus 0 #54 April 26, 2006 QuoteThe way it goes, you have to go to at least 2K for it to be legal.Quote Someone do it in Aus. QuoteOp Regs. 5.7.15. The exit height may be lowered to not less than 1500 ft for the holder of a Display A or Display B licence on display decents and practice decents for a particulat display. Seperate exits with immediate openings are required. Cheers, Jason. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Broke 0 #55 April 26, 2006 Quoteto me, a parachute jump is a low level jump where your chute opens straight away (like his attempts) a skydive invloves some freefall, and mainly done from a lot higher than 2000 feet his website says 600 skydives, i'd expect to see him do 600 skydives, not 600 parachute jumps I know I answered this in another thread, but here are some definitions from the USPA SIM Manual definitions section Quote PARACHUTE JUMP: A parachute operation that involves the descent of one or more persons to the surface from an aircraft in flight when an aircraft is used or intended to be used during all or part of that descent. (FAR 105 definition) SKYDIVE: 1. n. The descent of a person to the surface from an aircraft in flight when he or she uses or intends to use a parachute during all or part of that descent. 2. v. To jump form an aircraft with a parachute You will note that neither definition mentions anything about free fall. it is all about leaving an aircraft and riding a parachute down to earth. The difference between the two terms. Parachute Jump is an FAA term, and a skydive is a USPA term.Divot your source for all things Hillbilly. Anvil Brother 84 SCR 14192 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites skrovi 0 #56 April 26, 2006 that's one heck of a challange to accomplish. Initially when I read the heading on the post, I immediately got down to doing the math to figure out the frequency of his jumping (25 jumps each hour for 24 consecutive hours). The only factors I can think that might prevent are i) fatigue ii) weather iii) logistics issues Also, it might be a lil difficult to maintain the 2.4 minute per jump frequency/interval for jump after jump for 600 times. One slight delay means the next few jumps needs to be done that much faster or shave off few seconds from each remaining jumps. I guess being a part of former SF gives him that mental and physical stamina. Also before reading the entire threads in this post I was not sure if its a skydive, but now I'm convinced, each time you step off that ramp of an aircraft and land safely under a canopy is called a skydive, but then what do I know. I could only wonder, how his log book will be filled with 600 jumps in a matter of 24 hours. Good luck!! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites mjosparky 4 #57 April 26, 2006 QuoteThe way it goes, you have to go to at least 2K for it to be legal. The FAA has no requirement to exit or open by a given altitude. The 2000 foot pack opening is a USPA BSR only.My idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites ZigZagMarquis 9 #58 April 27, 2006 QuoteQuoteThe way it goes, you have to go to at least 2K for it to be legal. The FAA has no requirement to exit or open by a given altitude. The 2000 foot pack opening is a USPA BSR only. Yes, but isn't it FAI that certifies the record? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites mjosparky 4 #59 April 28, 2006 QuoteQuoteQuoteThe way it goes, you have to go to at least 2K for it to be legal. The FAA has no requirement to exit or open by a given altitude. The 2000 foot pack opening is a USPA BSR only. Yes, but isn't it FAI that certifies the record? No, FAI does not have a "most in 24 hr." category. It is in the Guinness Book Of World Records.My idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites ltdiver 3 #60 April 28, 2006 QuoteQuoteQuoteQuoteThe way it goes, you have to go to at least 2K for it to be legal. The FAA has no requirement to exit or open by a given altitude. The 2000 foot pack opening is a USPA BSR only. Yes, but isn't it FAI that certifies the record? No, FAI does not have a "most in 24 hr." category. It is in the Guinness Book Of World Records. So....what was Judy doing there at all hours of the night...until 8 the next morning? ltdiver Don't tell me the sky's the limit when there are footprints on the moon Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Feeblemind 1 #61 April 28, 2006 I met Jay last year while he was t4eaching an AFF-I course. When I heard about the 534 in 24 hours I askedthe same question, his reply was: 1) lots of friends 2) Three planes and pilots (if i remeber correctly) 3) 21 rigs with quick releases 4) 2100 ft exit alt, spiriling down for landing then repeating! The one question I forgot to ask him was that if he had any cut-aways during the attept Fire Safety Tip: Don't fry bacon while naked Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites mjosparky 4 #62 April 28, 2006 QuoteI met Jay last year while he was t4eaching an AFF-I course. When I heard about the 534 in 24 hours I askedthe same question, his reply was: 1) lots of friends 2) Three Two planes and Three pilots (if i remeber correctly) 3) 21 22 rigs with quick releases 4) 2100 ft exit alt, spiriling down for landing then repeating! The one question I forgot to ask him was that if he had any cut-aways during the attept No cutaways. Lori, Keeping track of the numbers. My idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites ZigZagMarquis 9 #63 April 28, 2006 QuoteQuoteQuoteQuoteQuoteThe way it goes, you have to go to at least 2K for it to be legal. The FAA has no requirement to exit or open by a given altitude. The 2000 foot pack opening is a USPA BSR only. Yes, but isn't it FAI that certifies the record? No, FAI does not have a "most in 24 hr." category. It is in the Guinness Book Of World Records. So....what was Judy doing there at all hours of the night...until 8 the next morning? ltdiver Sucking down lots of free MooseHead too... I'd suppose... Anyway... this last time around, like Mikey said, No Cutaways... I think he had one the time before last when he did it in Yuma. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Feeblemind 1 #64 April 28, 2006 well as I sais, best that I recalled, thanks for the correction. Phil Fire Safety Tip: Don't fry bacon while naked Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites peckerhead 0 #65 April 28, 2006 Quote a skydive invloves some freefall, and mainly done from a lot higher than 2000 feet Lets say he takes a 3 second delay each jump (arch, reach, pull) Times 600 jumps thats 1800 seconds or 30 minutes. Is a half an hour of freefall in one day enough for ya? I made some jumps with Jay many years ago at Ralphs in Oregon and he is the real deal. If anyone can do it Jay can! I don't think a cutaway would slow him down a bit. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites jumpingjimmy 0 #66 April 28, 2006 QuoteLets say he takes a 3 second delay each jump (arch, reach, pull) Times 600 jumps thats 1800 seconds or 30 minutes. Is a half an hour of freefall in one day enough for ya? i'd rather see 45 x 600 = 27000 seconds Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Prev 1 2 3 Next Page 3 of 3 Join the conversation You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account. Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible. Reply to this topic... × Pasted as rich text. Paste as plain text instead Only 75 emoji are allowed. × Your link has been automatically embedded. Display as a link instead × Your previous content has been restored. Clear editor × You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL. Insert image from URL × Desktop Tablet Phone Submit Reply 0 Go To Topic Listing
Broke 0 #55 April 26, 2006 Quoteto me, a parachute jump is a low level jump where your chute opens straight away (like his attempts) a skydive invloves some freefall, and mainly done from a lot higher than 2000 feet his website says 600 skydives, i'd expect to see him do 600 skydives, not 600 parachute jumps I know I answered this in another thread, but here are some definitions from the USPA SIM Manual definitions section Quote PARACHUTE JUMP: A parachute operation that involves the descent of one or more persons to the surface from an aircraft in flight when an aircraft is used or intended to be used during all or part of that descent. (FAR 105 definition) SKYDIVE: 1. n. The descent of a person to the surface from an aircraft in flight when he or she uses or intends to use a parachute during all or part of that descent. 2. v. To jump form an aircraft with a parachute You will note that neither definition mentions anything about free fall. it is all about leaving an aircraft and riding a parachute down to earth. The difference between the two terms. Parachute Jump is an FAA term, and a skydive is a USPA term.Divot your source for all things Hillbilly. Anvil Brother 84 SCR 14192 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
skrovi 0 #56 April 26, 2006 that's one heck of a challange to accomplish. Initially when I read the heading on the post, I immediately got down to doing the math to figure out the frequency of his jumping (25 jumps each hour for 24 consecutive hours). The only factors I can think that might prevent are i) fatigue ii) weather iii) logistics issues Also, it might be a lil difficult to maintain the 2.4 minute per jump frequency/interval for jump after jump for 600 times. One slight delay means the next few jumps needs to be done that much faster or shave off few seconds from each remaining jumps. I guess being a part of former SF gives him that mental and physical stamina. Also before reading the entire threads in this post I was not sure if its a skydive, but now I'm convinced, each time you step off that ramp of an aircraft and land safely under a canopy is called a skydive, but then what do I know. I could only wonder, how his log book will be filled with 600 jumps in a matter of 24 hours. Good luck!! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mjosparky 4 #57 April 26, 2006 QuoteThe way it goes, you have to go to at least 2K for it to be legal. The FAA has no requirement to exit or open by a given altitude. The 2000 foot pack opening is a USPA BSR only.My idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ZigZagMarquis 9 #58 April 27, 2006 QuoteQuoteThe way it goes, you have to go to at least 2K for it to be legal. The FAA has no requirement to exit or open by a given altitude. The 2000 foot pack opening is a USPA BSR only. Yes, but isn't it FAI that certifies the record? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mjosparky 4 #59 April 28, 2006 QuoteQuoteQuoteThe way it goes, you have to go to at least 2K for it to be legal. The FAA has no requirement to exit or open by a given altitude. The 2000 foot pack opening is a USPA BSR only. Yes, but isn't it FAI that certifies the record? No, FAI does not have a "most in 24 hr." category. It is in the Guinness Book Of World Records.My idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ltdiver 3 #60 April 28, 2006 QuoteQuoteQuoteQuoteThe way it goes, you have to go to at least 2K for it to be legal. The FAA has no requirement to exit or open by a given altitude. The 2000 foot pack opening is a USPA BSR only. Yes, but isn't it FAI that certifies the record? No, FAI does not have a "most in 24 hr." category. It is in the Guinness Book Of World Records. So....what was Judy doing there at all hours of the night...until 8 the next morning? ltdiver Don't tell me the sky's the limit when there are footprints on the moon Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Feeblemind 1 #61 April 28, 2006 I met Jay last year while he was t4eaching an AFF-I course. When I heard about the 534 in 24 hours I askedthe same question, his reply was: 1) lots of friends 2) Three planes and pilots (if i remeber correctly) 3) 21 rigs with quick releases 4) 2100 ft exit alt, spiriling down for landing then repeating! The one question I forgot to ask him was that if he had any cut-aways during the attept Fire Safety Tip: Don't fry bacon while naked Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mjosparky 4 #62 April 28, 2006 QuoteI met Jay last year while he was t4eaching an AFF-I course. When I heard about the 534 in 24 hours I askedthe same question, his reply was: 1) lots of friends 2) Three Two planes and Three pilots (if i remeber correctly) 3) 21 22 rigs with quick releases 4) 2100 ft exit alt, spiriling down for landing then repeating! The one question I forgot to ask him was that if he had any cut-aways during the attept No cutaways. Lori, Keeping track of the numbers. My idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ZigZagMarquis 9 #63 April 28, 2006 QuoteQuoteQuoteQuoteQuoteThe way it goes, you have to go to at least 2K for it to be legal. The FAA has no requirement to exit or open by a given altitude. The 2000 foot pack opening is a USPA BSR only. Yes, but isn't it FAI that certifies the record? No, FAI does not have a "most in 24 hr." category. It is in the Guinness Book Of World Records. So....what was Judy doing there at all hours of the night...until 8 the next morning? ltdiver Sucking down lots of free MooseHead too... I'd suppose... Anyway... this last time around, like Mikey said, No Cutaways... I think he had one the time before last when he did it in Yuma. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Feeblemind 1 #64 April 28, 2006 well as I sais, best that I recalled, thanks for the correction. Phil Fire Safety Tip: Don't fry bacon while naked Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
peckerhead 0 #65 April 28, 2006 Quote a skydive invloves some freefall, and mainly done from a lot higher than 2000 feet Lets say he takes a 3 second delay each jump (arch, reach, pull) Times 600 jumps thats 1800 seconds or 30 minutes. Is a half an hour of freefall in one day enough for ya? I made some jumps with Jay many years ago at Ralphs in Oregon and he is the real deal. If anyone can do it Jay can! I don't think a cutaway would slow him down a bit. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jumpingjimmy 0 #66 April 28, 2006 QuoteLets say he takes a 3 second delay each jump (arch, reach, pull) Times 600 jumps thats 1800 seconds or 30 minutes. Is a half an hour of freefall in one day enough for ya? i'd rather see 45 x 600 = 27000 seconds Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Prev 1 2 3 Next Page 3 of 3 Join the conversation You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account. Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible. Reply to this topic... × Pasted as rich text. Paste as plain text instead Only 75 emoji are allowed. × Your link has been automatically embedded. Display as a link instead × Your previous content has been restored. Clear editor × You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL. Insert image from URL × Desktop Tablet Phone Submit Reply 0