Sky_doggy 0 #1 August 27, 2012 Hello, I purchased a secondhand canopy with a couple of hundred jumps on it a while ago and the darnn thing smells. I am guessing that it might have been packed away when it was damp by the previous over although there aren't any signs of mold. I have tried leaving out unpacked for a few days but that didn't help. I was thinking of hanging it in the loft at my DZ for a week but before I do that I was wondering if anyone had some better advice. Thanks. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
airtwardo 6 #2 August 27, 2012 I was wondering if anyone had some better advice. Quote Yeah...go jump the stink out of it. ~ If you choke a Smurf, what color does it turn? ~ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Krip 2 #3 August 27, 2012 Quote Hello, I purchased a secondhand canopy with a couple of hundred jumps on it a while ago and the darnn thing smells. I am guessing that it might have been packed away when it was damp by the previous over although there aren't any signs of mold. I have tried leaving out unpacked for a few days but that didn't help. I was thinking of hanging it in the loft at my DZ for a week but before I do that I was wondering if anyone had some better advice. Thanks. Hi Me thinks its someone elses B.O. Get used to it, or stop sleeping with itFWIW IMO washing your gear is R. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites stayhigh 2 #4 August 27, 2012 is this thing f111?Bernie Sanders for President 2016 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Rover 9 #5 August 27, 2012 I washed my 1st canopy and the colours ran. Nothing like a tie dyed main. 2 wrongs don't make a right - but 3 lefts do. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites nigel99 143 #6 August 27, 2012 I don't know if you know the history of your canopy? I've come across a fairly new rental main that I jumped before and after it spent 3 weeks in the woods after a cutaway. After its stay in the woods it stunk badly. It might be worth getting a rigger to check it over, in case it has spent time outdoors like that. Can't help on the smell though.Experienced jumper - someone who has made mistakes more often than I have and lived. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites -ftp- 0 #7 August 27, 2012 For the fun of it, describe the smell please. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Sky_doggy 0 #8 August 27, 2012 Hi, the smell is a bit like if you soaked a towel in stagnant water and you let it dry out. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites masterrig 1 #9 August 27, 2012 Like was mentioned earlier... jump the 'stink' out of it. Chuck Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites SEREJumper 1 #10 August 27, 2012 I would get it checked out by a rigger you trust to be safe. I had a canopy that smelled like cig smoke and hung it outside, out of the sun and heat, under our back patio with a fan on in for a couple of days and that got most of the smell out.We're not fucking flying airplanes are we, no we're flying a glorified kite with no power and it should be flown like one! - Stratostar Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Sky_doggy 0 #11 August 28, 2012 Hi all, there were a few questions on this so I thought I'd answer then in one posting. The canopy is a Pilot 188 so it ZX material Yep, I am jumping the heck out it, but the stink is still there. Obviously I am not jumping it enough !! I might be BO but I bought it off a lady and she actually smelt pretty good. Yes, my rigger has looked at it and the canopy is in good shape and safe. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites BIGUN 1,049 #12 August 28, 2012 RIGGERS - please give your opinions on the following: Bar of Ivory Soap. Cheese Grater About a quarter of a bar into small bits. Place in a mister bottle and let soak until it all becomes liquid. Some spritzes deep into in each cell, top skin and bottom skin. IMMEDIATELY rinse off entire canopy. Rinse it off a lot. Hang out to air dry with a big fan if possible (out of the sun) DISCLAIMER: While I've done it on ZP; that don't make it right.Nobody has time to listen; because they're desperately chasing the need of being heard. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites ctrph8 0 #13 August 28, 2012 The less a canopy comes in contact with water, the better. If you absolutely have to (like you landed in the ocean or covered it with mud) use fresh water. I've heard of people using things like a very small amount of Woolite but I wouldn't. Each manufacturer has worked out the least invasive way to wash their canopies. Call them! Try not to wash the seams too vigorously. There are lots of different materials in a canopy besides 0-P or F-111. Sometimes they shrink but the materials around them don't. If you have no other choices, soak the canopy and keep the lines out of the water as much as possible. Empty the water and soak it again to rinse. If I am trying to get the salt out of a canopy from being in the ocean, I actually taste the canopy in a few places to tell if all of the salt is off of the fabric. Let the water do the work. The less you scrub or agitate the canopy the less you will mess with the coatings on the fabric. Hang the canopy by the tail (as opposed to the lines) to dry it. Try not to let any one part take the weight of the entire wet canopy. All of that water is heavy and can distort the shape of a canopy. If it is a small canopy, a distortion can make for some really exciting moments. Hang it in a cool, dry, ventilated place. Fans help. The seams will dry much more slowly than the fabric. If the fabric is dry but the seams feel damp, let it hang. Don't pack that wetness into your rig. Mold sucks! Ivory soap is probably not a good idea. Again, try not to wash the coatings off of your canopy. To the OP: You really can jump the stink out of it. Sometimes rigs just smell rank if they have been sitting for a while. The more you jump them the less they stink. QuoteRIGGERS - please give your opinions on the following: Bar of Ivory Soap. Cheese Grater About a quarter of a bar into small bits. Place in a mister bottle and let soak until it all becomes liquid. Some spritzes deep into in each cell, top skin and bottom skin. IMMEDIATELY rinse off entire canopy. Rinse it off a lot. Hang out to air dry with a big fan if possible (out of the sun) DISCLAIMER: While I've done it on ZP; that don't make it right. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites BIGUN 1,049 #14 August 28, 2012 Thank you. I agree with your comment about Woolite and learned some 10-15 years ago from a Rigger that it's no longer what it used to be, but now has a detergent agent in it. I never verified the comment because he was one of those no BS riggers. In fact, it was his recommendation "If you're going to do anything, then do this... (The post above). You're especially correct when it come to hanging it evenly by the tail and I forget that some DZ's don't provide a hang line across the hanger. And here in Oklahoma, one can hang their canopy by the bottom, aim some fans into the nose cells and it doesn't take long to dry. Again thanks.Nobody has time to listen; because they're desperately chasing the need of being heard. 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
Krip 2 #3 August 27, 2012 Quote Hello, I purchased a secondhand canopy with a couple of hundred jumps on it a while ago and the darnn thing smells. I am guessing that it might have been packed away when it was damp by the previous over although there aren't any signs of mold. I have tried leaving out unpacked for a few days but that didn't help. I was thinking of hanging it in the loft at my DZ for a week but before I do that I was wondering if anyone had some better advice. Thanks. Hi Me thinks its someone elses B.O. Get used to it, or stop sleeping with itFWIW IMO washing your gear is R. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
stayhigh 2 #4 August 27, 2012 is this thing f111?Bernie Sanders for President 2016 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rover 9 #5 August 27, 2012 I washed my 1st canopy and the colours ran. Nothing like a tie dyed main. 2 wrongs don't make a right - but 3 lefts do. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
nigel99 143 #6 August 27, 2012 I don't know if you know the history of your canopy? I've come across a fairly new rental main that I jumped before and after it spent 3 weeks in the woods after a cutaway. After its stay in the woods it stunk badly. It might be worth getting a rigger to check it over, in case it has spent time outdoors like that. Can't help on the smell though.Experienced jumper - someone who has made mistakes more often than I have and lived. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
-ftp- 0 #7 August 27, 2012 For the fun of it, describe the smell please. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Sky_doggy 0 #8 August 27, 2012 Hi, the smell is a bit like if you soaked a towel in stagnant water and you let it dry out. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
masterrig 1 #9 August 27, 2012 Like was mentioned earlier... jump the 'stink' out of it. Chuck Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SEREJumper 1 #10 August 27, 2012 I would get it checked out by a rigger you trust to be safe. I had a canopy that smelled like cig smoke and hung it outside, out of the sun and heat, under our back patio with a fan on in for a couple of days and that got most of the smell out.We're not fucking flying airplanes are we, no we're flying a glorified kite with no power and it should be flown like one! - Stratostar Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Sky_doggy 0 #11 August 28, 2012 Hi all, there were a few questions on this so I thought I'd answer then in one posting. The canopy is a Pilot 188 so it ZX material Yep, I am jumping the heck out it, but the stink is still there. Obviously I am not jumping it enough !! I might be BO but I bought it off a lady and she actually smelt pretty good. Yes, my rigger has looked at it and the canopy is in good shape and safe. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BIGUN 1,049 #12 August 28, 2012 RIGGERS - please give your opinions on the following: Bar of Ivory Soap. Cheese Grater About a quarter of a bar into small bits. Place in a mister bottle and let soak until it all becomes liquid. Some spritzes deep into in each cell, top skin and bottom skin. IMMEDIATELY rinse off entire canopy. Rinse it off a lot. Hang out to air dry with a big fan if possible (out of the sun) DISCLAIMER: While I've done it on ZP; that don't make it right.Nobody has time to listen; because they're desperately chasing the need of being heard. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ctrph8 0 #13 August 28, 2012 The less a canopy comes in contact with water, the better. If you absolutely have to (like you landed in the ocean or covered it with mud) use fresh water. I've heard of people using things like a very small amount of Woolite but I wouldn't. Each manufacturer has worked out the least invasive way to wash their canopies. Call them! Try not to wash the seams too vigorously. There are lots of different materials in a canopy besides 0-P or F-111. Sometimes they shrink but the materials around them don't. If you have no other choices, soak the canopy and keep the lines out of the water as much as possible. Empty the water and soak it again to rinse. If I am trying to get the salt out of a canopy from being in the ocean, I actually taste the canopy in a few places to tell if all of the salt is off of the fabric. Let the water do the work. The less you scrub or agitate the canopy the less you will mess with the coatings on the fabric. Hang the canopy by the tail (as opposed to the lines) to dry it. Try not to let any one part take the weight of the entire wet canopy. All of that water is heavy and can distort the shape of a canopy. If it is a small canopy, a distortion can make for some really exciting moments. Hang it in a cool, dry, ventilated place. Fans help. The seams will dry much more slowly than the fabric. If the fabric is dry but the seams feel damp, let it hang. Don't pack that wetness into your rig. Mold sucks! Ivory soap is probably not a good idea. Again, try not to wash the coatings off of your canopy. To the OP: You really can jump the stink out of it. Sometimes rigs just smell rank if they have been sitting for a while. The more you jump them the less they stink. QuoteRIGGERS - please give your opinions on the following: Bar of Ivory Soap. Cheese Grater About a quarter of a bar into small bits. Place in a mister bottle and let soak until it all becomes liquid. Some spritzes deep into in each cell, top skin and bottom skin. IMMEDIATELY rinse off entire canopy. Rinse it off a lot. Hang out to air dry with a big fan if possible (out of the sun) DISCLAIMER: While I've done it on ZP; that don't make it right. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BIGUN 1,049 #14 August 28, 2012 Thank you. I agree with your comment about Woolite and learned some 10-15 years ago from a Rigger that it's no longer what it used to be, but now has a detergent agent in it. I never verified the comment because he was one of those no BS riggers. In fact, it was his recommendation "If you're going to do anything, then do this... (The post above). You're especially correct when it come to hanging it evenly by the tail and I forget that some DZ's don't provide a hang line across the hanger. And here in Oklahoma, one can hang their canopy by the bottom, aim some fans into the nose cells and it doesn't take long to dry. Again thanks.Nobody has time to listen; because they're desperately chasing the need of being heard. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites