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JohnMitchell 16
QuoteAre you jumping a pullout instead of a throw out? With a pullout, which I jump, the container is open and you're holding onto the bottom of the pilot chute, which has a hell of a lot of pull. The throw out, you're holdin on to the top of the pilot chute, and you could very easily hold on to it for the rest of your life.
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Beachbum 0
I don't have a death grip on it, tho I guess I could hang on if I made the effort ... I just never have tried. It does get removed about the time I get my arm to full extension (I DO have long arms ... I'm 6'2")
This isn't something I ever made a concious effort to do this way ... but around my 4th jump on my own rig (student rigs were all ripcord) I just noticed that it worked like that in my case.
Am I right or wrong? I've never heard of this happening to anyone, but I'm sure it has.
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In matters of style, swim with the current; in matters of principle, stand like a rock. ~ Thomas Jefferson
Beachbum 0
jakee 1,563
Quoteif I pull rears and I"m downwind, will that make me go backwards? or will it still help?
Depends on how windy it is. If you're in light winds then a touch of rears will probly still help you. If the winds are stronger and you have minimal ground speed then rears or brakes will not help and you will either stop altogether or start going backwards. Anywhere in between those two examples I suppose it just depends on canopy, WL and the input you give.
JohnMitchell 16
If you hold the pilot chute correctly, palm up, like you said, the only way it's going under your arm is if you are unstable, especially really head high, or really thrashing around. the danger in holding onto the pilot chute is that the wind drag on the bridle may be enough to pull the pin. You could them have an out of sequence deployment, meaning the bag leaving before the pilot chute. And yes, I've watched some pretty unstable deployments and seen some good line burns over the years.QuoteIf you hold onto your pilot chute rather than throwing it, is it not possible for your bridle to escape the folds and come underneath your arm? In the good scenario your pilot chute will still deploy behind your arm and if you are wearing short sleeves you could end up with a hell of a bridle burn on your arm. In another scenario the pilot chute could catch the wind just the right way and deploy around your arm (bridle whizzing past your armpit in front of you) This could really hurt and cause some problems w/ deployment.
Am I right or wrong? I've never heard of this happening to anyone, but I'm sure it has.
JohnMitchell 16
Quoteit's a boc ... (pud isn't the correct term?) ... it's like a hackey sack on the top of the pc
QuoteI think Pud is usually associated with pullouts, the throwouts are usually just called hackies or . . . what do we call those little PVC pipe handles? Anyone?
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1/ I checked that the handle had not been pulled down
2/ I checked that the cables were still in their riser housings
3/ I re-stowed the cut away handle
If I would have had ANY doubt, I would have chopped
"For once you have tasted Absinthe you will walk the earth with your eyes turned towards the gutter, for there you have been and there you will long to return."
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