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murrays

Have You Ever Gone Low INTENTIONALLY?

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>I think low-pulling has declined over the years but I'm curious
>to see if many people still like humming it occasionally.

I wrote a poem once in the mid 70's
which I can only remember the last
few lines of

- ...
- So I always pull high now

- Except for those times
- A certain feeling in the air

- To take it on down
- A little closer to the ground


I was never a low puller, although I was around
a lot of people who were. I mostly pulled at 2,000
or even 2,500.

A few times though... I remember one day at Oceanside
we had clouds at 2,000 ft and we were doing relative
work from the Cessna.

And one day in 1970 I was down below Mexico City
helping to set up for the first Pan American something
or other meet and I thought I would just see, so I pulled
at 800 ft.

But I never really liked it down there like some people
seemed to.


These days I mostly pull up around 3,000 ft.

I'm older and slower and don't crave that kind of excitement.
I've already seen what's down there.

Plus today's chutes take for fucking ever to open,
and their malfunctions are way more complicated
and violent.


The only time, sometimes when I have a good track
going right over the hangars and packing area I feel
a small urge, but even then I'll throw at around 2,000.

After all, I'm sliding down the hypotenuse, so some of
that opening distance is horizontal, right?? :-) :-)

Skr

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Quote

>
These days I mostly pull up around 3,000 ft.

I'm older and slower and don't crave that kind of excitement.


Same here...it's not a question of limitations, just
don't need to test them anymore.
Quote

>
Plus today's chutes take for fucking ever to open,
and their malfunctions are way more complicated
and violent.
Skr


Which brings me to my question. It looks like you
have been in the sport a lot longer than I...Do you
think gear has truly become safer over the years or just
technically superior in performance?
-----------------------------------
Mike Wheadon B-3715,HEMP#1
Higher Expectations for Modern Parachutists.

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>Do you think gear has truly become safer over the years
>or just technically superior in performance?

Technically superior.

The stuff I started on (1962) was perfectly safe,
even fashionable if you liked olive drab :-) :-)

Is a square safer than a round? Well, you have
fewer unintentional water landings (the leading
cause of death in the 60's), but a whole lot of
landing in a turn fatalities.

Do 3 rings work better than capewells? Yes, but
the only reason we started cutting away was these
new fangled canopies with their violent malfunctions.


Safety is mostly a human thing, not a gear thing,
at least for the typical gear you see in today's
sport parachuting world.

Skr

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SKR
Thanks...I thought I was the only one who felt that way. We had a DZ here in Canada that was in operation for 26 yrs. Round/Round manual deployed
belly mounts, and cuttaways were not taught to students"capewells". First off ,I have never been there
or know the DZO. I do not know for sure but have heard of only one fatality"power line strike" in all this
time. So I figure they were not smoking in at terminal on a regular basis. No RSL/AAD .
I'm not saying we should return to days of old, it's just I'm not sure how much safer the sport really is today.

Like you say...safety is a state of mind.

just thinking out loud...mike
-----------------------------------
Mike Wheadon B-3715,HEMP#1
Higher Expectations for Modern Parachutists.

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Mike,
You are correct. The only student fatality experienced at the now-closed dz you refer to was a power line electrocution.
--
Murray

"No tyranny is so irksome as petty tyranny: the officious demands of policemen, government clerks, and electromechanical gadgets." - Edward Abbey

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Never gone low intentionally, but i have heard the 1500' alarm on my Dytter go off about 3-4 times (under canopy or during deployment, not in freefall) All of them were pretty much on larger jumps with unfamiliar jumpers that funelled, I would rather go a bit low if I cant see everyone rather then risk a collision.

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It used to be fun before kids and responsibilities. Everyone had a 7-cell, F-111 square, reliable as hell, cut like the base canopies are now. You could take it down a ways and put your trust in those canopies and maybe some fast reflexes if you needed it. You've got to pay attention when you're deep in the beeps, though. What's really dangerous is to be kinda low but have no clue.

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