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Does any one know where to get the Lazy Bag system?

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There was a guy at the dz a little while ago who had the Lazybag deployment bag. it had no rubber bands and stowed the lines super neat.
I've been looking for one to use in my Mirage but can't seem find one for sale or anything like it even.
I found a video on youtube but it didn't have a link.
Anyone got a word?

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There was a guy at the dz a little while ago who had the Lazybag deployment bag. it had no rubber bands and stowed the lines super neat.
I've been looking for one to use in my Mirage but can't seem find one for sale or anything like it even.
I found a video on youtube but it didn't have a link.
Anyone got a word?



http://www.compal.be/LazybagEN.html

Mike
ChutingStar.com

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From a technical point of view I'm not that confident with the design. The lazy bag does not do anything to try and guarantee that the opening is staged correctly. If the bag closing tabs end up being tugged out before you reach linestretch it could definitely contribute to a mal.

-Michael

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The tailpacket works great for BASE jumpers, but we don't use tuck tabs. I have to agree that a tuck tag hanging up would make me more than a little nervous. Why move away from the velcro? Yeah it wears but just replace it after a few hundred jumps. I dont see the advantage of the tuck tabs except to make it live up to its name even more.
"If this post needs to be moderated I would prefer it to be completly removed and not edited and butchered into a disney movie" - DorkZone Hero

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I wouldn't worry about line dump. Tail pockets work fine for terminal BASE jumps.

They cost 100 euro for magnets and 90 for velcro. Not sure about tuck tabs.

[/url]http://www.pgasus.be/start.php?pg=text&item=mPOD

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Ok someone needs to explain how the f*** you don't get line dump from this......

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Ok someone needs to explain how the f*** you don't get line dump from this......




The way I understand line dump. When lines come out of the stows uneven, inside lines before lines beside rubber band. That causes the the canopy to open uneven. If all the lines are extracted evenly then no line dump occurs.

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Reserves also stow the lines in a pocket. While I don't know anything about BASE rigs I did watch some oh so carefully being packed once.

On a reserve freebag the pocket is setup to be emptied first and the lines must then pull themselves from 2 stows before the canopy is allowed to exit. The same sort of principle has worked for years even back into round deployment diapers.

My concern here is that I see nothing to stop a good hard snatch from the PC from extracting the lines and canopy from the bag all at the same time.

-Michael

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There seems to be a misconception about line dump. If I understand it correctly, actually line-dump is when the canopy starts to inflate (it literally needs to be out of the bag) before the lines are at full extension. This causes a brutally hard opening. As long a a bag has locking stows or the equivalent to keep the canopy in the bag until there is tension on the lines, that won't happen. The lazy bag (the one with the thick spectra or dacron "prongs" that go through grommets and then back in to "slots" on the bag) should theoretically take care of this.

The other bag from one of the links that is just held closed with magnets makes me a bit more nervous than the one with the cord closure system that is tucked through grommets.

It's not much different that a reserve free-bag (most designs anyone) which has two locking stows (made out of one safety stow) and then the rest of the line free stowed in a velcro pouch.

Ben
Mass Defiance 4-wayFS website


sticks!

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There seems to be a misconception about line dump. If I understand it correctly, actually line-dump is when the canopy starts to inflate (it literally needs to be out of the bag) before the lines are at full extension. This causes a brutally hard opening. As long a a bag has locking stows or the equivalent to keep the canopy in the bag until there is tension on the lines, that won't happen. The lazy bag (the one with the thick spectra or dacron "prongs" that go through grommets and then back in to "slots" on the bag) should theoretically take care of this.



You are right. "Line dump" is an urban myth... AFAIK no one has been able to document in on film. The canopy will stay in the bag until the locking stows are released and you can’t have an out of sequence deployment with the canopy still in the bag.

I built this bag a few years ago, see attachments, and put over 1000 jumps on it with 3 different canopies. Never had a problem related to the bag design.

Sparky
My idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals

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I could be mistaken, but doesn't the PDFT use a similar system... or at least a few of them? I recall one of them packing next to me and he clearly used a "figure 8" to stow the lines. The lines were then secured using tuck tabs. He was finished in just minutes. I remeber thinking to myself, would be great to have something simlialr in my Mirage. But, figured it was a "one-off from Sunpath to the team.
Don't be sexist… Broads hate that.

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There seems to be a misconception about line dump. If I understand it correctly, actually line-dump is when the canopy starts to inflate (it literally needs to be out of the bag) before the lines are at full extension. This causes a brutally hard opening. As long a a bag has locking stows or the equivalent to keep the canopy in the bag until there is tension on the lines, that won't happen. The lazy bag (the one with the thick spectra or dacron "prongs" that go through grommets and then back in to "slots" on the bag) should theoretically take care of this.



You are right. "Line dump" is an urban myth... AFAIK no one has been able to document in on film. The canopy will stay in the bag until the locking stows are released and you can’t have an out of sequence deployment with the canopy still in the bag.

I built this bag a few years ago, see attachments, and put over 1000 jumps on it with 3 different canopies. Never had a problem related to the bag design.

Sparky


Very impressive mjosparky B|
Im guessing you are a qualified rigger yes?!

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I have a very similar design for my main, It's a regular 2 grommet D-bag with a parapack pocket sewn to the back of it... only difference is i don't have any velcro or magnets or tuck tabs, just an open pocket


i've had beautiful openings for the past 400+ jumps (katana 120)

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I could be mistaken, but doesn't the PDFT use a similar system... or at least a few of them? I recall one of them packing next to me and he clearly used a "figure 8" to stow the lines. The lines were then secured using tuck tabs. He was finished in just minutes. I remeber thinking to myself, would be great to have something simlialr in my Mirage. But, figured it was a "one-off from Sunpath to the team.



The PDFT used the lazy bag. There was an agreement between Javelin and Ludo Havelaars (the man behind the lazybag)

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From a technical point of view I'm not that confident with the design. The lazy bag does not do anything to try and guarantee that the opening is staged correctly. If the bag closing tabs end up being tugged out before you reach linestretch it could definitely contribute to a mal.

-Michael



Euh?
Stop jumping now. When you deploy your parachute and 1 rubberband breaks during deploiement, ... Or even worse, you have to use your reserve and 1 of the lockingstows fails?

That risk is higher than what you describes.

Jump a lazybag, try it and give us some feedback.

Jurgen

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I have been using scott roberts design and have put several hundred jumps on it with a velo and katana and have even packed it wrong several times testing it out and have had nothing but nice openings with it and pledge by his design. You should contact him if you are interested in getting one or learning more about them and mention the name Shane to him!

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Stop jumping now. When you deploy your parachute and 1 rubberband breaks during deploiement, ... Or even worse, you have to use your reserve and 1 of the lockingstows fails?

That risk is higher than what you describes.

Jump a lazybag, try it and give us some feedback.



The reserve requires the lines to be pulled from the freebag before any stress is placed on the locking stow. If it breaks at that point it has already done it's job.

On my Vector3 main bag you would need probably 3 of 4 elastics to fail before it could debag itself. Considering all the lines are stowed on elastics there is a very good chance you already got a properly staged deployment at that point anyway.

The point I'm trying to make here is that the elastics are there for a very good reason - to stage the opening. I fail to understand how removing them replaces their function.

-Michael

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I built this bag a few years ago, see attachments, and put over 1000 jumps on it with 3 different canopies. Never had a problem related to the bag design.

Sparky



It's like a D-bag meets a tail pocket with two locking stows instead of one.

I find that using a tail pocket requires a packing mat (stash bag and a little pony clamp works fine) attached to the rig to prevent wear as I drag it towards me and takes a bit longer than separate line stows walking the bag to the rig with no mat.

What's you're packing experience like with the hybrid?

I currently believe that the lazy bag is a solution in search of a problem since you get rid of tube stoe replacement which is infrequent at the expense of packing time which is spent on every jump.

Might be good for marketting though, like velcro elimination on risers (it was bad for flaps so it must be bad for toggles)

Do other people find themselves getting more onry (which I can't spell) as they age or is it just stress?

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It's like a D-bag meets a tail pocket with two locking stows instead of one.
...
What's you're packing experience like with the hybrid?
...
I currently believe that the lazy bag is a solution in search of a problem since you get rid of tube stoe replacement which is infrequent at the expense of packing time which is spent on every jump.



The lazy bag saves my thumbs. No more pain after a weekend of jumping and packing.

Most of the jumpers do not drag their rig. They do the two locking stows and than they walk to their rig, put the bag on the ground and stow away the rest of the lines.

Jurgen

PS Over here lot's of jumpers use a lazy bag.

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