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jumper03 0
QuoteThe military skydive doesn't come to mind for me. I'm looking at it from a sport student skydiver perspective.
I agree with you dave- I think it would encourage bad body position. Who needs to arch? the drogue keeps you stable...
Scars remind us that the past is real
QuoteThe military skydive doesn't come to mind for me.
Well the Military led the way for skydiving in the beginning.....then the sport world became more advanced than the military. Now things are changing again. You would be pretty surprised by what the military is doing with parachutes nowadays. In fact the military may be the only reason you are jumping the gear you are........
While it may be a poor idea for the sport world....that doesn't make it a poor idea for everybody. 80% of Strongs business is military...and military business fuels the cheap sport gear
riggerrob 613
This concept pre-dates tandem by many years.
Russian paratroopers used it back during the Cold War. All their static-line rigs included drogues and KAP3 auto-openers. The idea was to use the static line to deploy the drogue, then the jump-master could adjust the length of the drogue-fall by adjusting the KAP3.
Soviet drogues were anchored to the scruff of the paratrooper's neck. The also wore front-mounted reserves. SKYDIVING Magazine published a photo of a Russian paratrooper a few years back. He pretended to fire his AK-47 while in drogue-fall.
The end result was system far too complicated for the average grunt to adjust. Something about kilopascals per quantum ?????? on a circular slide rule?????
A few years later (1970s?) Alaskan smoke-jumpers did some cross-training with Siberian smoke-jumpers and adopted drogues. Ted Strong built a bunch of Soviet-pattern drogues for the Alaskan smoke-jumpers shortly before he started doing tandems in 1983.
The Ted Strong tried back-loading this drogue-fall concept to American skydiving students. I never heard the full story, but apparently a student got into a violent spin over Hinckley, Illinois). He spun all the way until the AAD (Sentinel or FXC) in his reserve fired and the round reserve got wrapped around the drogue bridle. Wrapped so badly that it never opened. This accident resulted in a nasty law suit and I never heard the verdict.
Ergo, Strong quit building drogues for student rigs in the early 19990s.
Russian paratroopers used it back during the Cold War. All their static-line rigs included drogues and KAP3 auto-openers. The idea was to use the static line to deploy the drogue, then the jump-master could adjust the length of the drogue-fall by adjusting the KAP3.
Soviet drogues were anchored to the scruff of the paratrooper's neck. The also wore front-mounted reserves. SKYDIVING Magazine published a photo of a Russian paratrooper a few years back. He pretended to fire his AK-47 while in drogue-fall.
The end result was system far too complicated for the average grunt to adjust. Something about kilopascals per quantum ?????? on a circular slide rule?????
A few years later (1970s?) Alaskan smoke-jumpers did some cross-training with Siberian smoke-jumpers and adopted drogues. Ted Strong built a bunch of Soviet-pattern drogues for the Alaskan smoke-jumpers shortly before he started doing tandems in 1983.
The Ted Strong tried back-loading this drogue-fall concept to American skydiving students. I never heard the full story, but apparently a student got into a violent spin over Hinckley, Illinois). He spun all the way until the AAD (Sentinel or FXC) in his reserve fired and the round reserve got wrapped around the drogue bridle. Wrapped so badly that it never opened. This accident resulted in a nasty law suit and I never heard the verdict.
Ergo, Strong quit building drogues for student rigs in the early 19990s.
bclark 0
I've seen more than one instructor
who couldn't hold heading under a drogue!
JerryBaumchen 1,304
Hi Rob,
About the July '64 issue of PARACHUTIST had a cover picture of a guy jumping a Ballute. This was some type of drogue system on a fore & aft rig.
What goes around comes around . . . . .
JerryBaumchen
QuoteThis concept pre-dates tandem by many years.
About the July '64 issue of PARACHUTIST had a cover picture of a guy jumping a Ballute. This was some type of drogue system on a fore & aft rig.
What goes around comes around . . . . .
JerryBaumchen
Swwet, I've been looking for something like that for a two-stage braking procedure for speed diving. Though I'm not sure about puting that kind of stress on a 16 y.o. harness.
The funny thing was that a even as recent as this years PIA I'd talked to Strong reps about the possibility of getting a sport rig modded like that and they didn't have a clue. Guess I should have talked to the man himself.
-Blind
"If you end up in an alligator's jaws, naked, you probably did something to deserve it."
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