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Rdutch

Question about Far's and intentional cutaway's?

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At the Pia yesterday, there was an awesome video from one of the Canopy manufacturers doing intentional cutaways. There was a really good shot of a gostplane performed with the upper skydiver's doing a MR. Bill and the camera man slid over the top of the lower canopy then as he fell off head down, the lower skydiver cut away and they flew for a few seconds together until the reserve was deployed.

Ok but here is the question? I couldn't help notice that all of the cutaway's were performed with a regular sport rig, and not an intentional cutaway rig with 3 canopies. Isnt an intentional cutaway not allowed based on the far's without a backup chute?
It was killer video but not very responsible if you ask me. Just curious.


Ray
Small and fast what every girl dreams of!

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You can clearly see in the video, that the reserve risers were attatched to the container permanently in the video, unless they designed a new internal non 3 ring release system. But after watching the video about 4 times and my friend (A master rigger with about 50 intentional cutaway's of his own) and I both came to the conclusion that it wasn't possible for there to be another reserve on the jumper.
There was actually another conversation about it later that I overheard from other people.


Ray
Small and fast what every girl dreams of!

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Very possible that there wasn't a third canopy. I know people that cutaway and deploy their reserves at re-pack time. NOT RECOMMENDED for a number of reasons. A friend of mine watched someone go in with a reserve bag lock after cutting away a perfectly good canopy (he was kown for doing this).

That being said, Billy Weber did a bunch of cutaways for "Malfunction". The third canopy was under the main, ripcord activated. Very slick rig, except that the first main had to be deployed in order to get the last chance out. He could cutaway the reserve w/ outboard tandem style handles.

Hook

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I remember reading in the FARs a sport jumper must have a single harness dual parachute system to jump from an aircraft, however I do not recall the FARs saying that you were not allowed to use both. :ph34r:
How do you know if it works if you don´t try it?

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How do you know if it works if you don´t try it?



Demo, trust your rigger, or better yet, become one. I do not want "Cutaway a perfectly good canopy and the reserve malfunctioned" on my toombstone. Just not worth the risk, especially when I own a cutaway rig.

Hook

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the reserve risers were attached to the container ... a new internal non 3 ring release system



I recently saw a test rig with short reserve risers ending in the base ring of a 3-ring. The risers were just long enough for the ring to be inside the reserve container. A second set of very short risers could be attached, resulting in a standard-length assembly. With the container closed, it would look very similar to a normal rig.

Mark

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Doing intentional cutaways without a third canopy is dangerous, bordering on STUPID! Especially when you consider how many different ways there are to attach a third canopy to your existing harness.

Most old-school jumpers just clip on an old chest-mounted reserve when doing intentional cutaways. If they cannot sew extra D-rings on their existing harness ,some of them even wear a second harness under their regular harness. The configuration is bulky and awkward, but it is legal.
They look like they are pregnant or "shop-lifting water melons", but at least they are being cautious.
I suppose you could design a low-profile chest-mounted reserve. It would not be certified (i.e. TSOed) but at least you would conform with the intent of the law.

However there are several ways to rig extra canopies that are not apparent to all but the sharpest observer.

1. Attach two sets of (mini) main risers to regular-sized 3-rings. "Shopping bag" deploy, static-line, buddy deploy, etc. the first/test main canopy. The extra main d-bag does not even have to be attached to your harness. Just hold it in your hands and toss it as you fall away from the airplane. When you get bored with the test canopy, cut it away then deploy your regular main canopy from your regular main container.

2. Sew or zipper an extra main container below your regular main container. This looks like the "BOC from hell." Deploy that with a left-handed, throw-out pilot chute. Cut it away when you get bored (cue evil laughter), then deploy your regular main with a pilot chute mounted on your right hip.

3. Start with the largest student container you can find. Sew in a second pack tray - half the thickness of the main container. Pack your regular main and secure it with the extra flap. Stuff your regular main pilot chute in the regular BOC. Pack the second/test/junk canopy into a second d-bag and stuff its pilot chute into a left-hand BOC. Deploy the first/test/junk canopy first and when you tire of it, cut it away and you are back to deploying your regular main in the regular manner.
I built a pair of these (much modified Telesis F18 containers) for the Canadian Army Team - a decade ago - so they could do intentional cutaways at airshows.

Note: the smoothest way to rig risers - for intentional cutaways - is to sew an extra set of RW-1 or RW-8 harness rings onto your main risers, so that you can cutaway both main canopies with one pull on a red handle.

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>1. Attach two sets of (mini) main risers to regular-sized 3-
>rings. "Shopping bag" deploy, static-line, buddy deploy, etc. the
> first/test main canopy.

This is what I usually do. I started out just holding onto the main and exiting; now I have a neat chest-mount container that Derek built (complete with a BOC pouch!) to do the same thing. Cutaway handles are on the risers themselves.

>2. Sew or zipper an extra main container below your regular main
> container. This looks like the "BOC from hell." Deploy that with a
> left-handed, throw-out pilot chute.

I've also seen this done as "The Wad." Pack the whole canopy as if it was a pilot chute in a big pouch. Stow the lines in a tailpocket. (Obviously works better on smaller canopies.)

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This is what I usually do. I started out just holding onto the main and exiting; now I have a neat chest-mount container that Derek built (complete with a BOC pouch!) to do the same thing. Cutaway handles are on the risers themselves.



Bill,

I made a chest container like this in the 80's. I sewed mounting loops for separable three ring harness rings to the main lift webs of an old northern lite. Throw out pouch on the bottom of the chest container. Container tie downs like a pop top. Cutway cables sewn to each riser. Really like this system because your not obligated to open the cutaway canopy to deploy the main you plan on landing. And after you cutaway your back in freefall with a normal rig. BUT, I couldn't figure out an easy way to get the container to leave with the canopy. The flaps would cover handles. Does your container leave with the canopy? If so, how is it rigged.

I expect I could figure it out now, 20 years later, but just wonder how yours is rigged.;)
I'm old for my age.
Terry Urban
D-8631
FAA DPRE

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This is what I usually do. I started out just holding onto the main and exiting; now I have a neat chest-mount container that Derek built (complete with a BOC pouch!) to do the same thing. Cutaway handles are on the risers themselves.



Bill,

I made a chest container like this in the 80's. I sewed mounting loops for separable three ring harness rings to the main lift webs of an old northern lite. Throw out pouch on the bottom of the chest container. Container tie downs like a pop top. Cutway cables sewn to each riser. Really like this system because your not obligated to open the cutaway canopy to deploy the main you plan on landing. And after you cutaway your back in freefall with a normal rig. BUT, I couldn't figure out an easy way to get the container to leave with the canopy. The flaps would cover handles. Does your container leave with the canopy? If so, how is it rigged.

I expect I could figure it out now, 20 years later, but just wonder how yours is rigged.;)



I think with getting rid of an entire chest mount, I'd be worried about getting "smacked in da mouf" when it departed...

How about using extra long risers and two set of rings? Have the risers be part of the pack tray and the cutaway handle for the tertiary pull both sets? You'd have to have a little bit of slack between the top/bottom attachments to keep the geometry right, though. For that matter, you wouldn't really need much of anything to hold the bottom of the tertiary in place, if the main load was at the second set of large rings?
Mike
I love you, Shannon and Jim.
POPS 9708 , SCR 14706

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I've got 3 rigs where Jumpshack sewed on a place to stow an extra set of D-rings for intentional cutaways. Have a real nice cutaway system which hangs off of the chest strap. I normally just leave facing the tail and deploy the pilot chute and bag that I left holding onto.

I can cutaway either/both of the mains that I have then freely without interference. Works quite well.

W

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I've got 3 rigs where Jumpshack sewed on a place to stow an extra set of D-rings for intentional cutaways. Have a real nice cutaway system which hangs off of the chest strap. I normally just leave facing the tail and deploy the pilot chute and bag that I left holding onto.

I can cutaway either/both of the mains that I have then freely without interference. Works quite well.

W



Howdy Wendy!

I think he was wanting a self-contained tertiary that could be cutaway in it's entirety, container and all. The only way i could see to get rid of the whole thing cleanly would be a double 3 ring setup, where the bottom of the container get released before the tertiary risers do, and the tertiary container built on the bottom of an extra long set of risers.

I'd still be worried about that "smack in da mouf" as it goes bye-bye, though...
Mike
I love you, Shannon and Jim.
POPS 9708 , SCR 14706

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Strong has a intentional cutaway rig called a "Tridem" with three canopies on the back. The first main is on the bottom and deployed with a traditional BOC. The cutaway handles for this canopy are outboard, just like a strong tandem. The outboard silver handle deploys the second main (middle) by spring loaded PC. The third canopy is a traditional reserve.

If you could get your hands on two of these rigs you could do some bizarre jumps... Just think, a traditional Mr. Bill -> chop jumper 1's main -> deploy jumper 2's main -> chop it -> deploy jumper 1's secondary main -> then have jumper 2 bail and open their secondary. :S
Egad, A BASE life defiles a bad age.

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