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feuergnom 29
dudeist skydiver # 666
obelixtim 150
This incident was avoidable....the planning was deficient.......and the potential problems well known....no excuse for it....
JohnMitchell 16
I thought that they flew right from the airstrip there at the South Pole.
http://www.michael-s-kearns.com/national_public_radio.htm
The site it was found on:
http://www.michael-s-kearns.com/south_pole_skydive.htm
--Art
obelixtim 150
QuoteDidn't they fly to the Pole from somewhere else, a long way away, hence the hypoxia, and there was quite a different elevation between airfield and LZ......hence possible confusion over AAD's.....
From the links I just posted:
QuoteFollowing a six-hour flight from Antarctica's Patriot Hills field site, the team's chartered Twin Otter touched down at 7 a.m. near the Amundsen-Scott Station, where they posed for obligatory thumbs-up snapshots and took off again.
Edit to add from the Maxim article:
QuoteWe spent an hour and a half at the station checking on another's equipment
--Art
QuoteThe guy also says that when he realized the group got too low, he went for his reseve. I guess that's a good thing to do, if you can overcome your normal reflex of reaching back to pull your main. But later he praises AADs and says "it saved my life". So which one was it - did he himself or the AAD save his life?
From the links I just posted:
QuoteKearns realized they'd already dropped below 2,000 feet, so he tracked away and reached for his rip cord. As he did, his automatic activation device (AAD), an altitude sensor that triggers the reserve canopy at 750 feet, deployed the chute.
--Art
obelixtim 150
QuoteHere's a transcript of the NPR story:
http://www.michael-s-kearns.com/national_public_radio.htm
The site it was found on:
http://www.michael-s-kearns.com/south_pole_skydive.htm
--Art
Am I the only one who read that entire article in my head using Bob Edwards voice?



"Some call it heavenly in it's brilliance,
others mean and rueful of the western dream"
Frodo 0
Same hereQuoteAm I the only one who read that entire article in my head using Bob Edwards voice?

Too bad he stopped doing the Morning edition a while ago.
Avion 0
Loss of altitude awareness.
Good post.
Frodo 0
Thanks for the links. I was especially impressed with the woman's account of the incident in the Antarctic Sun. It's rare to see someone outside of the skydiving community trying in all honesty to understand the motivations, etc. Especially when strangers come to the place that you call home, and their actions result in three deaths and totally knock you out of your normal mental state and working routine.QuoteHere's a transcript of the NPR story:
http://www.michael-s-kearns.com/national_public_radio.htm
The site it was found on:
http://www.michael-s-kearns.com/south_pole_skydive.htm
--Art
But then again, she is not a whuffo, she used to jump in the past. In any case it was nice to know there are very open-minded people out there.
feuergnom 29
he was - for various reasons - well known around vienna
thanks for the transcript-link
dudeist skydiver # 666
JohnMitchell 16
My wife and I made some 4 way jumps with Steve a few weeks before he headed off to the South Pole. We were jumping from 13000+. The South Pole jump was from 8000. That's a easy way to lose track of time.QuoteThe transcript said that they did have supplemental oxygen. So, what happened? Visual references useless. All they had to depend on were altimeters, and is seems that they ignored them until the last moment.
Loss of altitude awareness.
Good post.
skydiverek 63
QuoteThe transcript said that they did have supplemental oxygen. So, what happened?
They did have a supplemental oxygen, but chose not to use it (at least some of them). That was written in skydiving magazine shortly after the accident. There was no bailout oxygen. Only one had Cypres, not all had visual or audible altimeters...
skydiverek 63

murps2000 86
120mph to 0mph in 3-5 feet? Pretty abrupt deceleration, but I'm sure he could have survived till he suffocated if Maxim said so.

skydiverek 63
Quote120mph to 0mph in 3-5 feet? Pretty abrupt deceleration, but I'm sure he could have survived till he suffocated if Maxim said so.
I heard it from someone, not from Maxim. Also, they mjst have been going faster than 120mph - landing zone was 9,000ft above sea level.
BTW, these articles explain pretty well what happened: http://www.michael-s-kearns.com/south_pole_skydive.htm

if it is this one - they didn't care to take oxygen with them, got hypoxia and went straight in
dudeist skydiver # 666
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