Recommended Posts
QuotePay no attention to the "naysayers" out there who are afraid of
"progress". With today's technology we do have a very good product that can be placed in EVERYONE'S hand. This is called marketing. The best way to advertise your DZ is when more people can walk out with advertising in their hands.
If you would like more information about my camera set up and photos, let me know.
Well, Rick, besides making wrong, wild-ass assumption about the motivations behind your "naysayers", you are also confusing the hardware with the end product when you talk of "progress".
Yep, the hardware is improving...who woulda thought THAT would happen?

Small-profile hardware is a good thing. The picture quality of the Go-Pro, for instance, is great and it comes in a small package. All is well and good. That's not the issue here.
If you think a shaky, vibrating handcam video is better than what the outside guys have historically been giving you, then I don't know what to say.
If you can get steady-shot video from a handcam on a TI, and if you will capture more than that little microsphere surrounding the TI and the customer, then you are waaaaaay ahead of everybody else in the world.
Oh and going from steady shot to shakiness is not progress. It's retrogression for the sake of the latest and greatest in cool factors. THAT is marketing.
YMMV
On top of that. Here's another issue directly related to safety:
With the advent of the small-profile hardware, comes the idea that it's not really a safety factor. Young jumpers are getting the idea that the USPA recommendations for camera flying don't apply to those Go-Pros. I think you know as well as I do that that idea is just not true.
And to address the economics, what I've seen is that Go-Pro is making a killing selling replacement cameras that are getting knocked off in freefall AND at opening. Good for them, bad for the videographer.
I think we're all Bozos on this bus.
Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239
Please don't think that your one DZ represents all of them. We've had other, and different, comments about outside vs inside.
YMMV.
I think we're all Bozos on this bus.
Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239
JohnMitchell 16
We had a tandem group that brought their own rented-for-the-day GoPros. We helped them mount them to their hands and let them Hero their jump. No problems encountered, except I had to reach over and turn their hand to get themselves, and more importantly ME, in the frame.QuoteI just had a student yesterday ask me if it was OK to do his own HandCam.

Liemberg 0
QuoteDo you have a choice of outside guys to fly with the tandems?
In the ideal world maybe.
In the real world there's the documented fact of a +1800 jumps videoflyer smacking a + 2000 jumps TI in the head with the camera helmet on opening, killing them both in the process and leaving the student suspended at 4000ft with a recently deceased behind him to solve all possible issues...
Where that can leave 'the industry'? Just follow the latest news on the recent double fatality at the Ranch, with all the lawyers of New York studying the case to see if there are big bucks to be made and all the networks screaming bloody murder over the lack of regulation and oversight....
On youtube there's enough footage to be found of "cameraflyers to the rescue" complicating situations that ought to be solved by the TI. The fact that no one gets killed most of the time does not make that a good idea to begin with - and one just never knows if not the otherwise competent camera guy suddenly decides it is time for some true heroism in the spur of the moment when the s**t hits the fan.
Personally I have seen footage of a cutaway drogue + mainbag passing on one side of the camera frame while the freebag and reserve can be seen seconds later passing on the other side of the camera frame, both way to close for comfort...
Granted, that was on a dutch TI's safety day, serving as an example of 'how not to', so it isn't a daily occurrence.
A handcam however, be it in a glove or on a one-and-a-half foot pole cannot fly the tandempair out of the sky or dump a parachute in their face like a cameraflyer can and Murphy's second law clearly states that what cannot happen does not happen. ..

Lastly, of course I think a handheld pole with a GOPRO or a Contour isn't the brightest of idea's in skydiver stupidity - but I'm convinced that done right by a competent TI it's gradually less stupid than say double wingsuit tandems, sitfly tandems, head down tandems, hybrid tandems and 'look ma, I'm standing on the Ti's back holding the drogue bridle'-tandems...
"Whoever in discussion adduces authority uses not intellect but memory." - Leonardo da Vinci
A thousand words...
RickH 0
QuoteQuotePay no attention to the "naysayers" out there who are afraid of
"progress". With today's technology we do have a very good product that can be placed in EVERYONE'S hand. This is called marketing. The best way to advertise your DZ is when more people can walk out with advertising in their hands.
If you would like more information about my camera set up and photos, let me know.
Well, Rick, besides making wrong, wild-ass assumption about the motivations behind your "naysayers", you are also confusing the hardware with the end product when you talk of "progress".
Yep, the hardware is improving...who woulda thought THAT would happen?
Small-profile hardware is a good thing. The picture quality of the Go-Pro, for instance, is great and it comes in a small package. All is well and good. That's not the issue here.
If you think a shaky, vibrating handcam video is better than what the outside guys have historically been giving you, then I don't know what to say.
If you can get steady-shot video from a handcam on a TI, and if you will capture more than that little microsphere surrounding the TI and the customer, then you are waaaaaay ahead of everybody else in the world.
Oh and going from steady shot to shakiness is not progress. It's retrogression for the sake of the latest and greatest in cool factors. THAT is marketing.
YMMV
On top of that. Here's another issue directly related to safety:
With the advent of the small-profile hardware, comes the idea that it's not really a safety factor. Young jumpers are getting the idea that the USPA recommendations for camera flying don't apply to those Go-Pros. I think you know as well as I do that that idea is just not true.
And to address the economics, what I've seen is that Go-Pro is making a killing selling replacement cameras that are getting knocked off in freefall AND at opening. Good for them, bad for the videographer.[/reply
I agree totally regarding the use of Go Pro cameras and low time jumpers.....it is a camera and should fall under the guidelines of USPA recommendations.
We still offer both outside and inside and the "ultimate" package as well ( outside and inside edited together). We have been doing this for over 2 years now. We are getting more customers now requesting inside (handicam). Mainly because of the footage we capture when the canopy opens...to be able to capture those remarks when the canopy opens ans while flying under canopy is priceless.
I too am a videographer and I admit that the outside "picture" that you are able to take is a much better "shot"...
As a tandem instructor I no longer worry about the timing I have to have with my videographers upon exiting the plane so we don't get separation, I no longer worry about the dangers involved with another body flying around with me. I do miss seeing those " few" talented camera flyers flying with me as we perform our choreographed moves, it is a thing of beauty to watch and participate in.
As a DZO, I must listen to the "customer", and I must do all that I can to maximize the profit margin of every load I put in the air. And maximize the amount of advertising possibilities that will leave in the customer's hands.
The words of Roger Nelson will forever ring in my head when he said that our goal as a DZO is not to allow your customers to leave without something in their hands that represent your company.
If you are that DZ that offers just outside video and you are able to put a video in their hands 90% of the time, then keep doing what your doing. If you are looking for another "option" for your customer base...
TRY IT.
QuoteQuoteLet me guess - in your world the customer is always WRONG?
Nope. I don't know where you got that idea.
Your point about the safety factor of outside video is a very, very good one. It sounds like you ave had some real issues there. Do you have a choice of outside guys to fly with the tandems?
I don't understand your statement that flying tandem with a pole in your hand is a good idea. Could you elaborate?
Handcam quality sucks compared to outside.
You don't list a tandem rating in your profile. Is that correct?
You're not as good as you think you are. Seriously.
airsport 0
QuoteQuoteQuoteLet me guess - in your world the customer is always WRONG?
Nope. I don't know where you got that idea.
Your point about the safety factor of outside video is a very, very good one. It sounds like you ave had some real issues there. Do you have a choice of outside guys to fly with the tandems?
I don't understand your statement that flying tandem with a pole in your hand is a good idea. Could you elaborate?
Handcam quality sucks compared to outside.
You don't list a tandem rating in your profile. Is that correct?
popsjumper... seems like a bit of a troll to me. Safety/quality arguments for the sake of making noise. Neither are valid! Customer wants a memoir of their jump and HC is the most economical and safest! The moment you put someone else on the jump you increase the likelihood of things going wrong exponentially. How could you argue otherwise?
Quote
You don't list a tandem rating in your profile. Is that correct?
That's correct.
Are you going to say, "you have no opinion because you have no rating".
Let me be the first to say, "Bullshit."



In case you haven't read the thread....
Here's my two points:
1. Inside handcam end product quality sucks compared to outside video.
2. Tandem Handcam presents its own safety issues.
What's the problem?
I think we're all Bozos on this bus.
Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239
Quote
popsjumper... seems like a bit of a troll to me. Safety/quality arguments for the sake of making noise.
And you would be wrong.
If you want to talk relative safety, let's talk.
If you want to say that handcam is totally safe, you are only fooling yourself.
QuoteThe moment you put someone else on the jump you increase the likelihood of things going wrong exponentially. How could you argue otherwise?
Did anyone argue otherwise? Read it all again. It's already been spelled out for you.
I think we're all Bozos on this bus.
Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239
Liemberg 0
QuoteWith the advent of the small-profile hardware, comes the idea that it's not really a safety factor. Young jumpers are getting the idea that the USPA recommendations for camera flying don't apply to those Go-Pros.
I fail to see the logic of competent, experienced skydiving professionals being responsible for the misconceptions of beginners.
For instance, I guess with your 99 years of experience and 10000+ jumps you can pack more than twice as fast as someone who for the third time tries to wrestle all this slippery ZP fabric in that way-to-small bag. Following your logic you should slow down your packing to prevent the other guy from making mistakes that would invariably happen if he tried to pack as fast as you can.
Somehow. I just don't think you are doing that.
Other than that, with the modern light weight stuff there is indeed still the risk of getting carried away in wanting to get the shot (at the expense of surviving the skydive) but a whole lot of other issues that were part of 'bulky camera on the helmet and VHS-C recorder in the belly bag' are extinct nowadays...
I don't think one has to sit up on opening with only a GOPRO or a Contour attached to the helmet, to prevent a neck injury.
Then again, for a bridle it probably doesn't matter if it is caught on a GOPRO-mount or on a Newton ring sight...

"Whoever in discussion adduces authority uses not intellect but memory." - Leonardo da Vinci
A thousand words...
Ron 10
Quote
The only one's who like handcam are the ones getting paid to do it
Handcam has issues, but they can be controlled. I personally don't have any issue jumping a HC. I think the video is pretty good or I would not do it. The opening and under canopy stuff is GREAT.
And yes, the pay dos not hurt. But we run so many specials that most jumps I get paid like 10 bucks to do it.
Nope. I don't know where you got that idea.
Your point about the safety factor of outside video is a very, very good one. It sounds like you ave had some real issues there. Do you have a choice of outside guys to fly with the tandems?
I don't understand your statement that flying tandem with a pole in your hand is a good idea. Could you elaborate?
Handcam quality sucks compared to outside.
I think we're all Bozos on this bus.
Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239
Share this post
Link to post
Share on other sites