stevomooo 0 #1 October 27, 2007 Hi everyone. I'm interested to hear, from the very experienced canopy pilots, what height you typically start your turn. Especially the guys flying JVX's. I have read on Jim's website that the ideal turn height on a loaded jvx, for a 270, is around 850. I don't think that seems right, I've tried that height and it takes about 8 seconds under my jvx at 2.4. He says that for hybrid and sail its even higher.... I fly a jvx 89 loaded at 2.4. Typical turn is a 270, about 700 feet, at sea level. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
marks 0 #2 October 27, 2007 sounds like 700 is working for you. for me, on an 87, I prefer 750. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
RickyGood 0 #3 October 27, 2007 Hi Steve, I have the same canopy and loading as you. I like to turn about 700 feet give or take. I felt like much higher than that and the canopy would loose speed before the gate. I think rest of the NZ team are turning about that height too. Everyone has their own techniques and style but 850 does sound pretty high. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
newswooper 0 #4 October 27, 2007 I only have about 150 jumps on my jvx but i turn that high wl 2.5 all sail My first input is at 950 feet Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rdutch 0 #5 October 27, 2007 Quote Hi everyone. I'm interested to hear, from the very experienced canopy pilots, what height you typically start your turn. Especially the guys flying JVX's. I have read on Jim's website that the ideal turn height on a loaded jvx, for a 270, is around 850. I don't think that seems right, I've tried that height and it takes about 8 seconds under my jvx at 2.4. He says that for hybrid and sail its even higher.... I fly a jvx 89 loaded at 2.4. Typical turn is a 270, about 700 feet, at sea level. Turn height is greatly effected by where your at, In Florida I usualy start my turn at about 810 ft on a velo 90 or 96, but when I jump in Indianna I bump that up to 890 ft, in Perris I upped it to 910 ft, and added 80 ft to that in Colorado. The air density, altitude of the dz and other factors change your canopy flight. Also in Florida my turn height changes on hot muggy summer days and cool crisp winter days. That said you can modify your turn for different conditions, to roll out of your dive faster or loose less altitude while turning. Ray Small and fast what every girl dreams of! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
freeflyn 0 #6 October 27, 2007 JVX 77 (full sail) wl = 2.7 turn = 450, alt = 1150ft turn = 270, alt = 800ft 1500ft ASL Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
raymod2 1 #7 October 29, 2007 Most people fly to their setup point in brakes and the maneuver starts when they release the brakes. I say "maneuver" rather than "turn" because some people go right into the turn while others go full flight or dive with double front risers first. Using that definition then 850 feet sounds about right for my 270. If you look at my runs in the following video I let up on my brakes at 850 to 900 feet. I'm flying a zero-p JVX 90 at about 2.35 wing loading. http://www.sundered.org/cpc/pst2007_championships.mp4 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
RickyGood 0 #8 October 30, 2007 That's at mile hi yeah? If your turning at 850 at mile high, how much higher is that than your turn at sea level? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
raymod2 1 #9 October 30, 2007 My maneuver starts at 800 - 850 feet at sea level. I probably should have raised my initiation altitude a little more while I was in Colorado. In some of my runs you can see I needed too much rear riser input to plane out. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kamalasound 0 #10 November 3, 2007 And what about different turn techniques? How do you compare your 270° turing technique on the velo and on the JVX. I have just transitioned from the velo to the JVX but do not understand if I have to keep the same type of 270 or if I have to radically change it. Help would be appreciated Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
hparrish 0 #11 November 4, 2007 I think you will find that the JVX has more of a positive recovery arc than a Velo. It takes some technique to keep it in a dive and not pull out of your dive early. This does not mean that you should start your 270 lower on a JVX. Trust me keep it above 750'. You will need to develope a new style with setting up and executing turns with the JVX. That's the biggest complaint I hear from Velo pilots. I personally go into half Brakes for setup, go to double fronts and start my harness turn, I slowly let up on my outside riser, then ease out of my inside riser and follow through with my harness. I found this series of manuevers keeps me in my turn until I want to come out of my dive. I'll use altitude and rears to come out of my dive. Took me a good 50 jumps to start dialing in my style on the JVX. Be patient. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
hparrish 0 #12 November 4, 2007 Good Point... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DiggerDan 0 #13 November 4, 2007 I like to start right at 697 feet, but vary that by 3.7 to 98.4 feet, depending on conditions. I think it is best to start low and see how it goes. Then raise the starting height of your turn if you find that you are too low. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kamalasound 0 #14 November 4, 2007 Quote You will need to develope a new style with setting up and executing turns with the JVX. That's the biggest complaint I hear from Velo pilots. I personally go into half Brakes for setup, go to double fronts and start my harness turn, I slowly let up on my outside riser, then ease out of my inside riser and follow through with my harness. I found this series of manuevers keeps me in my turn until I want to come out of my dive. I'll use altitude and rears to come out of my dive. Took me a good 50 jumps to start dialing in my style on the JVX. Be patient. I'll follow your suggestions and keep calm and patient. I like the JVX but is a bit frustrating at times. I get consistent longer swoops than on a Velo but I feel I am way from doing a good turn!! Thanks Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rain-man 0 #15 November 4, 2007 Quote I think it is best to start low and see how it goes. Then raise the starting height of your turn if you find that you are too low. Quote What about the other way round where you start off high and adjust downwards first by changing technique (making it dive longer) before deciding to decrease height? Its safer and gives you more time to dive the canopy? Cant be a bad thing can it? (just my own 2 cents) Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites DiggerDan 0 #16 November 4, 2007 Nah. I say start low. That way you can really determine where the sweet spot is. You can't find that without digging out of the corner first. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Spizzzarko 0 #17 November 4, 2007 allright dude, put down the crack pipe and think about how assanine you sound. If you want to learn how to swoop then get coaching from a professional like Stu. If you want to die then listen to people here on DZ.com. The choice is years. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites DiggerDan 0 #18 November 5, 2007 Thought I was making that same point, but I guess that just proves how people will listen to anybody! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Spizzzarko 0 #19 November 5, 2007 I thought some one was listening to me once so I ripped a rightious fart and it ended up that they were only smelling me... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Join the conversation You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account. Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible. Reply to this topic... × Pasted as rich text. Paste as plain text instead Only 75 emoji are allowed. × Your link has been automatically embedded. Display as a link instead × Your previous content has been restored. Clear editor × You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL. Insert image from URL × Desktop Tablet Phone Submit Reply 0 Go To Topic Listing
DiggerDan 0 #16 November 4, 2007 Nah. I say start low. That way you can really determine where the sweet spot is. You can't find that without digging out of the corner first. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Spizzzarko 0 #17 November 4, 2007 allright dude, put down the crack pipe and think about how assanine you sound. If you want to learn how to swoop then get coaching from a professional like Stu. If you want to die then listen to people here on DZ.com. The choice is years. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DiggerDan 0 #18 November 5, 2007 Thought I was making that same point, but I guess that just proves how people will listen to anybody! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Spizzzarko 0 #19 November 5, 2007 I thought some one was listening to me once so I ripped a rightious fart and it ended up that they were only smelling me... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites