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mikeat10500 12
Some of us are in the sport to get away from rules and regulations. Jumpers always say "Why do the call it FREEfall...it's not free!!! It's called free fall because you are free of the A/C,free from the life you lead on the planet below, free to fly your
body through the sky, free to do what you damn
well please.
Mike Wheadon B-3715,HEMP#1
Higher Expectations for Modern Parachutists.
Genie 0
QuoteQuoteNewbie here, not a lot of experience, but I'm not too dumb & I can use logic. If someone's AAD goes off because they lost altitude awareness, should they be in this sport? Perhaps not.
QuoteWell, you've just told Glen Bangs - S&TA, Instructor Evaluator, and USPA board member he should not be in the sport.
Just FYI in our club we had a kinda unwritten rule - if your cypress fires because you have lost alti awareness then you were grounded. The idea was you'd already had your chance, ie you were now a dead man walking. I dont know anyone in our club who has ever had a cypress fire for going low. (we are a v small club by US standards tho)
Our CCI did fire one by spiralling down on a student rig Which by the way in one of the reasons to NOT have one. Cypres fires at 750 feet +/- 250 ft i think. If you go low and realise it and dump your main which is generally the automatic reaction then you can be in two canopy out situation. And in that case all bets are off - check out the research done at one stage on what should be done in a two out situation - basically they came to the conclusion that theres no one right rule, sometimes cutting away your main works, sometimes it fouls your risers and collapses the reserve. Sometime holding on to both and flying the bigger works ok, sometimes it downplanes at 100 ft.
On another note a friend of mine recently hit with a spining malfunction. Hes a V lucky guy as he went throuh trees and landed on marshy ground. Fractured pelvis, 8 broken ribs, broken nose, dislocated shoulder. In the immediate aftermath a number of people started saying oh if only he had an aad he would have been ok. He DID have an aad, and it was on - either he wasnt descending rapidly enough to fire it or it didnt work. Sometimes they dont. And people rely on them. Another member of the club has been jumping about 15 years, anout 10 of them without a Cypres. It had to go for its 4 year check and he didnt jump. That to me is wrong.
Also IIRC there was a fatality in Deland one christmas a couple of years ago, a girl who was jumping a demo rig, cut away at 3,500 and basically sat there waiting for something to happen. She didnt pull her reserve handle. Theories as to why she didnt pull included the fact that she normally jumped with an AAD and might have been waiting for it - i guess we will never know. I dont *think* suicide was was an obvious conclusion in this case ie no hints that she was depressed or in trouble but i could be wrong.QuoteI think you would be surprised at how often cypreses go off for very experienced, and very knowledgable skydivers.
I look on an AAD as an airbag in a car - if everything is going to hell it just might save your life - but its your fault that everything went to hell in general.
I must admit i have issues when people die and everyone asks why they didnt have an AAD - i think a much more pertinent question is why didnt they pull their handles?
If im not confident i can pull my on handles i shouldnt be in the air - personal opinion. And if im in the air and dont pull my handles then i expect to die. afterall skydiving does expect you to take responsibility for yourself.
_Am
Wow, i really got long on this didnt i? Sorry !
Genie
wmw999 2,439
That's a good thing, because opening at 1000 is just about always better than opening at 500. But (I'm told) there's a huge difference in the kind of ground rush you get starting about 800-900 feet.
So not all of those people would be dead. But way too many would.
Wendy W.
RevJim 0
QuoteA new seat-belt or a new helmet doesn't cost $1200
Not to mention the fact that the seatbelt is included in the purchase price of the car, and will last as long as you own the car, not 12 years from the D.O.M.
Karma
RB#684 "Corcho", ASK#60, Muff#3520, NCB#398, NHDZ#4, C-33989, DG#1
Iflyme 0
I fully support seatbelt and helmet laws. These laws are in place to protect people who aren't smart enough to protect themselves. We also have bicycle helmet laws. A few years ago a teenage girl fell off her bike here at very low speed, hit her unprotected head on a curb, and died. A helmet would have saved her life.QuoteI am against the Gov requiring seat belts and helmets
Its my business if dont use these things and no one elses. By not wearing them I ony harm myself, therefore its my business and no one elses. I dont need the Gov to wipe my ass for me.
beowulf 1
Its my business if dont use these things and no one elses. By not wearing them I ony harm myself, therefore its my business and no one elses. I dont need the Gov to wipe my ass for me.
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I fully support seatbelt and helmet laws. These laws are in place to protect people who aren't smart enough to protect themselves. We also have bicycle helmet laws. A few years ago a teenage girl fell off her bike here at very low speed, hit her unprotected head on a curb, and died. A helmet would have saved her life.
Ok let me amend my first statement. I am against the Gov. forcing people of legal age, who can legaly sign documents, to use seatbelts or helmets or any other safety devices. If I dont feel the need to use them, then thats my problem. Under age kids should use these devices since they are too young to make these decisions.
That is what I was trying to say the first time.
riggerrob 643
QuoteI believe we've done more with peer pressure than we could with a law. I can count the number of friends jumping without a Cypres on two hands. The numbers always using seatbelts in jump planes is near 100% (there's the occasional goofball). And the number of people wearing hardshell helmets is near 100% where I jump. So, I think we've done fairly well here at my home DZ.
Chris Schindler
AADs have been mandatory for students in Canada for about 20 years now. One of my stupid IAD students would be dead now if it weren't for Francis Xavier Chevrier.
At one point, Snohomish tried to make AADs mandatory, but as soon as a lawyer explained the implications, Jamie Woodward backed down. The gist of the lawyer's explanation was that the first time a skydiver died because of a Cypres miss-fire/malfunction/entanglement, etc. the courts would sue the pants off the DZO.
This is the same logic that forced Quebec DZOs from making ADs mandatory.
This is the same logic that prevents my boss from checking reserve data cards.
Any time the DZO sets a standard, he increases his own liability.
This is a clear case of lawyers scaring DZOs into making unsafe decisions.
Isn' t the North American legal system wonderful?
As for my personal reasons for not having an AAD in all my rigs ... I had been jumping for 14 years and made more than 1,000 jumps before Cypri were invented. Since 1993 I have only jumped tandem with Cypres. All my IAD and PFF students wear FXCs. I have a Cypres in one of my personal rigs, but that is only because my boss loaned it to me because he wants his instrucotrs to lead by example. My second solo rig does not have a Cypres because A; it is so old that I cannot retrofit a Cypres to it and B; I am too cheap to buy a two-pin Cypres.
Hum. Maybe I should go to work and finish updating that Vector I that is gathering dust in the corner.
Ruffles 0
"I can think of few reason why I would ever think that someone should stop skydiving all together. I myself am the poster-child of fuck ups and I'm not gonna quit.
"Don't think that I am trying to impress upon you that screwing up and doing a low pull means you should quit the sport"
i'm out.
..
Law should be used to protect society from avoidable and unnecessary risks. Not to protect individuals from their personal choices.
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