voilsb 1 #26 September 22, 2012 I put 35 jumps on an OM-160 Optimum demo two years ago. I did high pulls, wingsuit jumps, RW jumps, hop and pops, everything. It flew and flared fine, at terminal and sub-terminal. The hole in the slider was big enough I could fit my head through it while wearing my helmet (on the ground). I don't recall any of the openings being terribly fast or at all painful.Brian Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Chris-Ottawa 0 #27 September 22, 2012 Hey Peter, I am actually having fun, DZ.com is an endless source of amusement! I tend to disagree with the fact that reserves don't fly like mains. They do, they fly just like 7 cell mains. Of course they don't fly like highly engineered, crossbraced 9 cell canopies, they are a simplistic 7 cell design, designed for reliability. I think the OP is doing the right thing and taking the time to learn about his gear. Something many, many more people should do. By no means am I saying that all reserve landing should be stand ups, I'm simply saying that they are all more than capable of offering a stand-up landing. Of course conditions, stress, or the situation can affect the landing, but that's not a "feature" of the reserve. I fully agree that the OP should know that it's not going to fly/land exactly like a 9 cell with a powerful flare, but I would never suggest that he should be given the expectation that he would HAVE to slide it in or PLF etc. That's absurd. I think it's pretty clear based on the fact that this thread was even started, that the OP knew it would be different. It's an airfoil just like any other canopy. By demo'ing it, he will have the opportunity to discover that it may need some adjustment of the flaring style, or timing, but the OP wasn't asking for techniques. As I understand, he was asking for ideas to make the most effective use of his time with the reserve. Techniques should be given by his instructors, in a face to face environment. A certain post in this thread would have led the OP to expect nothing more than to be slammed into the ground by the reserve after attempting a PLF. Instead, he should be given the opportunity to discover that it does actually flare, and it is actually capable of offering a stand up, graceful landing. And it's sleep time for me..."When once you have tasted flight..." Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
nigel99 471 #28 September 22, 2012 QuoteWell, if that's what you inferred from what I wrote, then I'm going to infer that you can't land a Tempo standing up, am I correct? Well I might have been able to stand it up I don't know. I learnt to jump on rounds and I'll stick my neck out and say that if you are 100% committed to a PLF you can't stand up the landing because your legs are in the wrong place. In my case this was my first reserve ride and I didn't want a cocked up landing to make my day worse. Next time if I'm on the dz I'll stand it up, if I'm landing off it will be a plf.Experienced jumper - someone who has made mistakes more often than I have and lived. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DocPop 1 #29 September 22, 2012 QuoteI am coming back soon with more info. Thanks. I have heard it before, but never actually seen the legislation written down anywhere."The ground does not care who you are. It will always be tougher than the human behind the controls." ~ CanuckInUSA Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
erdnarob 1 #30 September 22, 2012 Here we are. Here in attachment an exerpt of the CSPA Parachutist Information Manual (PIM 1) dealing with Basic Safety regulations and recommendations chapter 3.16. I am pretty sure that USPA has about the same requirements. That makes sense for : 1) a jump pilot wants to use zero parachute then wear one 2) a regular jumper wants to use one parachute then wear two 3) a jumper wanting to test a reserve in the reserve container configuration wants to use two parachutes then wear three See any test jumper at DeLand for instance testing a reserve in normal configuration, he/she always has a tertiary reserve mounted on belly with a very long bridle cord.Learn from others mistakes, you will never live long enough to make them all. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
hillson 0 #31 September 24, 2012 Quote I would have thought PD would have given him advice on the Sub terminal/terminal deployment, especially if it was one of theirs. Can the OP clarify that?. Yeah...I posted this over the weekend while waiting to hear back...plus I had a few more questions. Part of the email that I got back: With the OP we would suggest you do both terminal and sub terminal openings so you can get a feel for how this canopy inflates given the different air speeds. I think you will be surprised how compliant the opening is, even for a reserve. As we think of most reserve rides being sub terminal, as rigger who has seen his fair share of reserve pack jobs you never know when that total sneaks up on you! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mjosparky 4 #32 September 24, 2012 Disclaimer: For the US. QuoteReserves are designed for slow and soft opening. No they are not designed to open slow and soft. AS8015-B 4.3.6 QuoteYou always need (according regulations) one parachute extra than the number of parachutes you want to use. While it is a good idea it is not required. Part 105.43 SparkyMy idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
popsjumper 2 #33 September 26, 2012 Quote Have no fear taking it to terminal. I demo'ed an OP143 loaded at 1.5 and I perceived that it opened more gently than a Katana 120 at 1.8. I'd be a lot more hesitant to take it terminal if it were packed like a reserve with the nose opened up and the tail not wrapped around. I was wondering when somebody was going to hit on that. It took all these posts from several people who all completely missed this. They tried to say the hard-opening thing about the Raven reserves, too. Get an RDS...the ground rats will love it. My reality and yours are quite different. I think we're all Bozos on this bus. Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Squeak 17 #34 September 26, 2012 Quote Quote Have no fear taking it to terminal. I demo'ed an OP143 loaded at 1.5 and I perceived that it opened more gently than a Katana 120 at 1.8. I'd be a lot more hesitant to take it terminal if it were packed like a reserve with the nose opened up and the tail not wrapped around. I was wondering when somebody was going to hit on that. It took all these posts from several people who all completely missed this. They tried to say the hard-opening thing about the Raven reserves, too. Get an RDS...the ground rats will love it. it was picked up way earlier in the thread, just ignoredYou are not now, nor will you ever be, good enough to not die in this sport (Sparky) My Life ROCKS! How's yours doing? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
erdnarob 1 #35 September 27, 2012 I speak by experience. I have had 6 reserve rides including two total. Three rounds and three square at all. Openings both after a cutaway or total, were soft and never like some slammer openings. Maybe the adrenaline made me feel something soft. But surprisingly, when I got my two totals (PD 160), the reserve was very progressive for opening but quite fast. I didn't have the time to contemplate the opening, when I had a look it, it was fully deployed. I have to say that I was equiped with a Skyhook in both cases. For the tertiary reserves, at the CSPA, this not a regulation but a recommendation to wear it for intentional cut away. Thanks to mention these discrepencies.Learn from others mistakes, you will never live long enough to make them all. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mjosparky 4 #36 September 27, 2012 QuoteI speak by experience. I have had 6 reserve rides including two total. Three rounds and three square at all. Openings both after a cutaway or total, were soft and never like some slammer openings. Maybe the adrenaline made me feel something soft. But surprisingly, when I got my two totals (PD 160), the reserve was very progressive for opening but quite fast. I didn't have the time to contemplate the opening, when I had a look it, it was fully deployed. I have to say that I was equiped with a Skyhook in both cases. For the tertiary reserves, at the CSPA, this not a regulation but a recommendation to wear it for intentional cut away. Thanks to mention these discrepencies. I am also speaking from experience. I have been involved in TSO testing on several reserve/emergency canopies. I have over 50 intentional test jumps on various types of canopies, round, square, cross from and others. Most modern canopies are reefed in some manner to prevent damage. But they are not designed to open slowly. Under TSO-23d they have a standard of 3 sec. or 300 feet, most being tested to 3 sec. Fast does not always mean hard. SparkyMy idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Deyan 36 #37 September 27, 2012 Quote But surprisingly, when I got my two totals (PD 160), the reserve was very progressive for opening but quite fast. I didn't have the time to contemplate the opening, when I had a look it, it was fully deployed. I have to say that I was equiped with a Skyhook in both cases. . It's a total malfunction. You know that Skyhook had nothing to add to the speed of the deployment, so why did you mentioned it?!"My belief is that once the doctor whacks you on the butt, all guarantees are off" Jerry Baumchen Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jonathan.newman 1 #38 September 28, 2012 Alright, Pops Jumper, I'll bite. When you pack a Raven in a d-bag, with the tail rolled around, how hard does it open? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mjosparky 4 #39 September 28, 2012 QuoteQuote But surprisingly, when I got my two totals (PD 160), the reserve was very progressive for opening but quite fast. I didn't have the time to contemplate the opening, when I had a look it, it was fully deployed. I have to say that I was equiped with a Skyhook in both cases. . It's a total malfunction. You know that Skyhook had nothing to add to the speed of the deployment, so why did you mentioned it?! +1 Anyone that depends on or has had one save their life was so deep in the shit they should reconsider skydiving. SparkyMy idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
popsjumper 2 #40 September 29, 2012 QuoteAlright, Pops Jumper, I'll bite. When you pack a Raven in a d-bag, with the tail rolled around, how hard does it open? If you are serious, just like any other canopy....nicely.My reality and yours are quite different. I think we're all Bozos on this bus. Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
erdnarob 1 #41 September 30, 2012 Your experience is quite impressive. But what I am saying about reserve comes from the feelings and I have no figures to post. I agree with you about the fast opening of reserves but, at least in my case, they were all soft. Now, can we have a parachute opening fast and soft together. I guess so providing the deployment being very progressive. In a way, I am saying that nobody has to be afraid to deploy a reserve at terminal speed and...on a total malfunction, you have no choice. Now for the people who said the Skyhook makes no difference, have a look at the Skyhook videos on the UPT Vector web site.Learn from others mistakes, you will never live long enough to make them all. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
erdnarob 1 #42 September 30, 2012 I mentioned the Skyhook for readers interest. In case of a total, the reserve pilot chute takes charge of the reserve deployment but important thing...the Skyhook has to unhook from the RSL as designed.Learn from others mistakes, you will never live long enough to make them all. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites