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BrianM 1
QuoteLook around DZ.com in history & trivia for the Chris Bickerdike thread.
I did. Some very interesting reading. Thanks!
QuoteTodd was only knocked out but Chris was screwed up pretty good.
I find it amazing that they survived!
QuoteI wonder if it's the same as the parabatic grip. You had to get in really close when setting it and long legs were a plus. 8~9 out of 10 times you wound up with a very strained normal grip that you worked hard on keeping. When it worked tight, it was a dream to fly in a DP.
That does sound like a parabatic grip. I don't think there would be too many different ways of doing that - it's probably the same thing. Do you know exactly how they did it? I can describe a parabatics grip, and maybe find some decent photos.
"It's amazing what you can learn while you're not talking." - Skydivesg
pchapman 279
Ok, I want to hear more about the parabatic grip, something others are wondering about too.
So here is what I remember as a CRW newbie who once took a camp with a couple former Plaid Jackets guys.
If you don't like my description or photo, let's have some better ones!
Jumper #1 has his legs with knees apart, but crossed at the ankles. Jumper #2 has his legs up through the gap between the first person's legs, from the bottom, and then clamps his feet inwards against the first person, against #1's hips.
Grips are therefore kept low, allowing for the rolling of both jumpers, and avoiding feet up at chest mounted handles.
How you best achieve all that while setting up for a side by side I don't quite know. I think the order in which the leg locks are created likely begins with the 'inner' set of legs being presented by #2, which are then clamped by #1's.
A not-that-great clipping from a photo, attached, shows the grip. (From Craig O'Brien's 2007 ParaGear cover photo of the Skyhawks quadraplane downplane.)
So here is what I remember as a CRW newbie who once took a camp with a couple former Plaid Jackets guys.
If you don't like my description or photo, let's have some better ones!
Jumper #1 has his legs with knees apart, but crossed at the ankles. Jumper #2 has his legs up through the gap between the first person's legs, from the bottom, and then clamps his feet inwards against the first person, against #1's hips.
Grips are therefore kept low, allowing for the rolling of both jumpers, and avoiding feet up at chest mounted handles.
How you best achieve all that while setting up for a side by side I don't quite know. I think the order in which the leg locks are created likely begins with the 'inner' set of legs being presented by #2, which are then clamped by #1's.
A not-that-great clipping from a photo, attached, shows the grip. (From Craig O'Brien's 2007 ParaGear cover photo of the Skyhawks quadraplane downplane.)
BrianM 1
Yes, the grip begins with the "inner" legs. Here's how you do it:
First, get into a side-by-side, then face off with the other jumper (so you are both facing 90 degrees from direction of flight). Taking grips on each other's wrists or forearms works well. Put your knees together and stick your toes in the small of the other person's back, toes turned inward. Then grab the other person's legs with your hands and cross them over your chest (forward foot first helps it stay together better, otherwise the forward foot wants to slide off). That's it! Now rotate your torsos toward the direction of flight and grab your toggles. Very important to keep your knees together and your toes in the small of his back the whole time. It's a good workout for your abs. It helps if you think of doing a situp the entire time. It also helps to be tall and skinny. When done well, it is a very solid grip. When not done well, it can start falling apart, especially when you try maneuvers that put stress on the grip (downplanes, butterflies, barrol rolls, pinwheels, etc).
You can practice this on the ground - just sit facing each other on the floor, the first person sitting between the other's spread legs.
First, get into a side-by-side, then face off with the other jumper (so you are both facing 90 degrees from direction of flight). Taking grips on each other's wrists or forearms works well. Put your knees together and stick your toes in the small of the other person's back, toes turned inward. Then grab the other person's legs with your hands and cross them over your chest (forward foot first helps it stay together better, otherwise the forward foot wants to slide off). That's it! Now rotate your torsos toward the direction of flight and grab your toggles. Very important to keep your knees together and your toes in the small of his back the whole time. It's a good workout for your abs. It helps if you think of doing a situp the entire time. It also helps to be tall and skinny. When done well, it is a very solid grip. When not done well, it can start falling apart, especially when you try maneuvers that put stress on the grip (downplanes, butterflies, barrol rolls, pinwheels, etc).
You can practice this on the ground - just sit facing each other on the floor, the first person sitting between the other's spread legs.
"It's amazing what you can learn while you're not talking." - Skydivesg
pchapman 279
Thank you for the parabatic grip details Brian. While practicing on the ground with another guy is of course useful, one gets a lot of snickers from other jumpers while doing so...
Were they transitioning directly into a 3 way downplane or just splitting when it went to shit?
I'm back in the USA!!
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