0
winsor

Airworthy Vintage Gear

Recommended Posts

I have been accumulating gear for decades now. I put it together into jumpable form, then store it in the loft until such time as the opportunity arises to air it out. With my schedule being what it is, I don't jump the half of it.

In any event, this forum seems to be populated with people who might be able to put to good use my duplicate items - for vintage gear jumps or just for fun.

I have the usual assortment of B-12/C-9 setups, with either 4-line release or modifications.

I have a couple of bellywarts, to include a T-10R and a C-9 with quarter bag, kicker plate and MA-1.

I have a UT-15 (Russian PC class canopy) and a couple of MK-1s. One of the PCs is in a Mini-System.

If there is anyone that wants any of this - hopefully to put it to good use, since it is all in good working order - contact me. I will let it go for less than I have invested in it; I just don't want any of it turned into car covers or kids' playthings.


Blue skies,

Winsor

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Quote

Probably should be in classifieds.....



I considered the classifieds, but figured this forum was where people who know what is what, and how to safely use it, would be found.

Also, my goal was more to make this stuff available to the part of the skydiving community that would actually value it than simply to list it "for sale." There are people who would drop the bucks for display or other purposes, and I have put too much time and effort into making it airworthy for that.

Thus, I think this forum is the best place to effect a handoff.


Blue skies,

Winsor

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
The UT-15 was the last round that I owned before converting to squares. It was hands down the best accuracy round that I ever jumped followed closely by the French Pap. Those 2 were the only rounds that I never had a mlfunction on as well. Seems like I averaged a mal every 200 or so jumps on PCs. I made 1600+ jumps on the Pap and UT with narry a mal.
GUNFIRE, The sound of Freedom!

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I had two malfunctions on para-commanders (in about 300 jumps). Both were caused by a short retainer line on my sleeve. The sleeve and pilot chute were pulled into the modifications in the back, which caused a spin. Maybe I could have rode it in, but both times I cut it away.

I wonder about packing methods on the para-commanders. I almost always did a book pack job. Maybe things were too neat. I had a lot of hard opennings and burns on my canopy.

A lot of jumpers, just flaked and sleeved their canopies. That seemed to work okay. I was leery of that method, so I rarely did it.....

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Quote

I had two malfunctions on para-commanders (in about 300 jumps). Both were caused by a short retainer line on my sleeve. The sleeve and pilot chute were pulled into the modifications in the back, which caused a spin. Maybe I could have rode it in, but both times I cut it away.

I wonder about packing methods on the para-commanders. I almost always did a book pack job. Maybe things were too neat. I had a lot of hard opennings and burns on my canopy.

A lot of jumpers, just flaked and sleeved their canopies. That seemed to work okay. I was leery of that method, so I rarely did it.....




I did both ways.. and had better luck with just flaking it.. ang sleeving mine... rather than flakeing... splitting it.. doing all the cute little folds... on the stabilizers etc....


It seemed simpler.. and less functions. Maybe it was just less wierd folds to induce shit to happen.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Hi steve,

The only malfunction that I ever had on a ParaCommander was the time that I packed it exactly 'by the book.'

A whuffo showed up on the dz that day and was asking about packing/etc so I took my time to explain everything to him, I went real slow, and made it as neat as possible.

Didn't work. :S

JerryBaumchen

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Quote

I had two malfunctions on para-commanders (in about 300 jumps). Both were caused by a short retainer line on my sleeve. The sleeve and pilot chute were pulled into the modifications in the back, which caused a spin. Maybe I could have rode it in, but both times I cut it away.

I wonder about packing methods on the para-commanders. I almost always did a book pack job. Maybe things were too neat. I had a lot of hard opennings and burns on my canopy.

A lot of jumpers, just flaked and sleeved their canopies. That seemed to work okay. I was leery of that method, so I rarely did it.....



Short retainer line = hard opening. A long retainer line seperates the snatch force and opening shock so you don't get it all at once.
GUNFIRE, The sound of Freedom!

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Quote

Quote

I had two malfunctions on para-commanders (in about 300 jumps). Both were caused by a short retainer line on my sleeve. The sleeve and pilot chute were pulled into the modifications in the back, which caused a spin. Maybe I could have rode it in, but both times I cut it away.

I wonder about packing methods on the para-commanders. I almost always did a book pack job. Maybe things were too neat. I had a lot of hard opennings and burns on my canopy.

A lot of jumpers, just flaked and sleeved their canopies. That seemed to work okay. I was leery of that method, so I rarely did it.....




I did both ways.. and had better luck with just flaking it.. ang sleeving mine... rather than flakeing... splitting it.. doing all the cute little folds... on the stabilizers etc....


It seemed simpler.. and less functions. Maybe it was just less wierd folds to induce shit to happen.



I seem to recall this being a common experience for this whole category of canopy (PC, Pap, etc.): doing the meticulous "Christmas tree" wound up having a higher overall mal rate than just a simple side-pack (flake & sleeve). Just my own anecdotal experience from what I'd done/seen/heard.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I was taught a the “side pack” by my PC mentor a couple of years ago. Flake the canopy, clear the steering lines, center lines and then slide it on the table. Do not split the canopy. Clear the “dog ears” up by the crown lines. Clear the stabilizers and fold the corners in and then fold in half. (kind of looks like an envelope). Pull down the sleeve. Double stow the crown lines (two wraps of the retainer band) to prevent bag slump. Don’t double stow the crown lines if you have a POD. Stow the suspension lines normally. Go jump. Repeat.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I made about 900 PC jumps with only one malfunction. Left stabilizer panel wrapped aroung the steering lines. The majority of the pack jobs were side pack, i.e. flake and sleeve. The one malfunction was a "By the book" pack job!
Side packing was introduced at Taunton, Ma. in the late 60's fro POP'S in Indiantown Fl.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Quote

Quote

... then slide it on the table.



We didn't have luxuries like "tables" - we packed out in the grass. Preferably with a girl in cutoffs and a bikini top holding tension.


Hmmmm? OK. I'll trade you one packing table for a girl in cuttoffs and a bikini top. Although in the long run a packing table would be less trouble. :P

Hopefully I'll get a jump in on my jumbo PC this weekend.

B|
Cael

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Hi Andy,

That is a real trip down memory lane.

The reserve container is a SuperPro; I have one in Red/Blue.

Also, the Capewell fittings seem to be the 'large bar' type. They actually came in two different sizes and you could not put a large bar male fitting into a small female fitting; or vice-versa.

In that 1st photo, those ripcords pins are just about to release a pilot chute into your face. B|

JerryBaumchen

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
This has me thinking about packing methods....
I was wondering about packing a rag (a 28 foot, or T-10).

It seemed that most people, I knew, layed the canopy down flat, (after flaking), and then 45'd the skirt and folded it into 1/3s before sleeving.

But I recall seeing some who would flake and sleeve (with the skirt 45'd.) This was a much quicker and easier method.

It seems like both methods would probably work just fine....

Any thoughts on this?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I have over 1,500 jumps on a PC and it never malfunctioned. I would always flake, fold all the gore openings and sleeve it...basically everything the PC manual said to do. Some openings were better than others but that applies to any canopy I ever jumped.

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.

Guest
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.

0