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I am more inclined to tell my student how to turn a bi-plane into a side-by-side and then chop the main. And if it is anything other than a bi-plane, chop it, because most of the time, they will clear just fine - I have done it myself.
I'll counter with:
"Most of the time"?
Uh huh.
Compare that "most of the time" with landing a stable biplane.
I'm sure that the stable biplane cutaways and the side-by-side cutaways that resulted in entanglements were freaks of nature and statistical anomalies.
QuoteDoes anyone actually have real statistics on how many main reserve entanglements occur due to cutting away from a biplane? 'cause if we do not, then the advice that ANY of us is giving is pointless.
So why do you feel compelled to advise young jumpers to destabilize a biplane into a side-by-side and cutaway thereby increasing the risk of entanglement?
You didn't mention situational awareness which is all-important in these situations, BTW.
I think we're all Bozos on this bus.
Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239
riggerrob 643
I agree with half of what you said/wrote.
I still believe in KISS for first (solo) jump students.
As they progress to smaller/faster canopies, they should receive a little more instruction - on canopy control/landing patterns/emergency procedures so that they start to grasp the "bigger picture" by the time they have 25 jumps.
tkhayes 348
QuoteSo why do you feel compelled to advise young jumpers to destabilize a biplane into a side-by-side and cutaway thereby increasing the risk of entanglement?
You didn't mention situational awareness which is all-important in these situations, BTW.
exactly my point, these situations are too complicated to write a paper about it and come up with a 'method'. KISS or whatever, YOUR student may very well get killed or seriously injured following a published procedure.
So don't publish one. Talk about it yes, and give several examples. and then focus on the prevention of any such thing ever happening because you are mostly likely fucked if it does.
Quoteexactly my point, these situations are too complicated to write a paper about it and come up with a 'method'. KISS or whatever, YOUR student may very well get killed or seriously injured following a published procedure.
Yes. ANY student could be killed with ANY method. The method used should be the one with the least risk of entanglements. Cutting away a side-by-side is a high-risk adventure. I'm glad you were successful with yours.
And God knows, we shouldn't cutaway a stable biplane.
QuoteSo don't publish one. Talk about it yes, and give several examples. and then focus on the prevention of any such thing ever happening because you are mostly likely fucked if it does.
Well, I would not sacrifice knowledge of what to do when it happens for that. There are too many instances where the problem was created beyond the control of the jumper. I can do everything possible to "prevent" it and it could still happen due to circumstances beyond my control. I want my students to know exactly what to do if it does, YMMV.
I think we're all Bozos on this bus.
Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239
I disagree with that. 20 years ago most everyone was jumping a Manta, and today we have everything on the shelf from a Spectre 170 to a Navigator 300 for our students.
I do not disagree with keeping it simple. However a student with 12 jumps could easily (at a progressive dropzone), be downsizing to a 1:1 wing-loading and to say that they should continue to think that they can land a biplane (IMO) borders on negligent.
So we then need to teach every student what to do on every jump depending on what canopy they have over their head for that particular wing-loading, canopy set etc.
In other words, you cannot use KISS. It is no longer simple and the answer changes with every set of gear they use and every canopy they fly.
Prevention is the key and landing under ONE parachute is always the best option.
I am more inclined to tell my student how to turn a bi-plane into a side-by-side and then chop the main. And if it is anything other than a bi-plane, chop it, because most of the time, they will clear just fine - I have done it myself.
Now if every student regardless of size and/or weight is/was jumping a 288 main and a 260+ reserve, then the issue of landing a bi-plane, arguably is not a bad decision.
My point is that there are far too many different size parachutes out there for students and to tell anyone to land a bi-plane with the performance of parachutes these days is probably going to end up with serious injury - regardless of the possibility of negligence.
Which is worse, the case for negligence or the case for serious injury? How many possible scenarios are you going to try and cram in their heads on a First Jump Course? or at 10 jumps? or at 25 jumps?
Does anyone actually have real statistics on how many main reserve entanglements occur due to cutting away from a biplane? 'cause if we do not, then the advice that ANY of us is giving is pointless.
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