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slotperfect

Never Let Go Of Your Toggles Once Released

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This statement was made by a couple of folks in the "loosen the chset strap" thread in General. More specifically, a jumper should never take their hands out of the toggles once they have released them and begun to fly the canopy, until the canopy is collapsed on the ground (my interpretation).

1) Who teaches this?
2) What is your reasoning behind it?
3) What are the positive things that come of this habit?
4) What are the negative things that come of this habit?

I am interested in some conversation on this topic . . . first I'd like to hear what everyone's experience is with this topic.
Arrive Safely

John

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I have no problems with taking my hands out of my toggles once the canopy is in flight. After i release the brakes to make sure my canopy has full range of flight and I am sure that no one is in my airspace I remove hands from toggles and stow my slider.
I then return my hands to the toggles and resume flight. Note that stowing the slider is the least of the priority after the parachute is deplyed and I can and will land with it uncollapsed if the traffic is heavy.
The positive of taking my hands out is collapsing the slider or position my helmet, etc.. the negative is that it can make it harder to put my hands back into the toggles after they are released, to combat this I made big grab toggles so my hands slip into them easy even with gloves on.
Joe
www.greenboxphotography.com

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I let go of my toggles often. One nice thing about velcro toggles is that they can be secured to the risers in flight, thus making them easy to find when I need them again. I can steer with my risers if I have to.

I don't let go of them once I enter the pattern, though. I'm not confident enough landing with rear risers.

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I have no problems with taking my hands out of my toggles once the canopy is in flight. After i release the brakes to make sure my canopy has full range of flight and I am sure that no one is in my airspace I remove hands from toggles and stow my slider.
I then return my hands to the toggles and resume flight. Note that stowing the slider is the least of the priority after the parachute is deplyed and I can and will land with it uncollapsed if the traffic is heavy.
The positive of taking my hands out is collapsing the slider or position my helmet, etc.. the negative is that it can make it harder to put my hands back into the toggles after they are released, to combat this I made big grab toggles so my hands slip into them easy even with gloves on.
Joe



I think another negative is that by unstowing the brakes you just increased the speed of the parachute while you are tending to other tasks.

You have 3000 jumps so with your developed level of awareness this is OK, but for other jumpers I think slower closing speed is best when they are taking off booties, messing with the slider, etc.

When the canopy has your full attention then let it loose.
"The restraining order says you're only allowed to touch me in freefall"
=P

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I think another negative is that by unstowing the brakes you just increased the speed of the parachute while you are tending to other tasks.

You have 3000 jumps so with your developed level of awareness this is OK, but for other jumpers I think slower closing speed is best when they are taking off booties, messing with the slider, etc.

When the canopy has your full attention then let it loose.



DougH
Agreed that I have a higher level of awerness and agreed the the closing speed will be faster when teh parachute is in full flight, however the act of stowing a slider, unzipping booties takes time.
lets say that you deploy, then you unzip booties, and then stow the slider, (now you have burned altitude that you can't get back) and then you go to release the brakes to find that one may be hung up to say a tension knot.. if you are uncomforable landing with your rear risers or the the release of the brakes from one side and not the other causes your canopy to spin, then you may have to cutaway.. you have wasted time and found yourself closer to the dirt because you unzipped booties and stowed a slider.. wich granted takes second to do, but that is still altitude lost.
To me a control check of the canopy is priority, I can land with booties on, I can land with my slider unstowed.
Back to students days, it's the canopy there? is it square? controlability check!
Joe
www.greenboxphotography.com

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I think it has to do with the overall training perspective. As it appears, some instructors teach "don't" when they haven't trained correctly and positively in the correct direction.

For instance, on our Cat B tandems we introduce rear riser control (turns) to our students. Why, its not important on their Cat C transition jump, right? Well, the introduction and demonstration on how to turn the canopy might just help them out some day. Not only that, but I do this by letting go of the toggle then grabbing the rear riser. It also shows and removes the fear of the toggle "going away" if you accidentally or purposely drop it.

Teaching something that will turn into a fearful knee-jerk response to a situation isn't the solution. Teaching a positive and correct response is. So why teach "don't EVER drop your toggles" to someone in the fear of a student or low time jumper to a possible in air conflict? Why not start off teaching about holding areas, vertical and horizontal separation, landing patterns and how to look left, right, below, behind and above for possible canopy conflicts? Something that will actually translate to a life saving practice as the student progresses beyond their A-license.
--"When I die, may I be surrounded by scattered chrome and burning gasoline."

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I would have to say teaching somebody to skydive needs definitive terms -- I teach my students once they unstow brakes they do not release them -- why as a student do you need to release toggles

For that matter with 5000 jumps why do you need to release the toggles after the brakes have been unstowed --- as for the booties thing - why do you need to take them off --- all of my bootie suits are just fine after hundreds of jumps with them left off -- as for the slider well thats 2 seconds 5 max

the only time I can see that hands need to come out of the toggles is if the canopy doesn't pass control checks and a cutaway must happen

I am not afraid to take my hands out of the toggles but I don't see why you must (I do it to get a radio out of my pocket if my student is flying the wrong direction but that is it)


The pimp hand is powdered up ... say something stupid

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I let go of my toggles every now and again to just fly and steer with my harness. I don't have velcro and never have an issue with regrabbing the toggles. I took a canopy course with Brian Germain a couple years ago and if I'm not mistaken he recommended doing this to get a better feel for your canopy and its characteristics.

Personally I don't understand either why people are so freaked out about letting go of their toggles. Provided of course you grab them again before you cutaway altitude just in case ;)


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I think I'm the one that first mentioned the toggle issue in the other thread. Nowhere did I say "never" let go of the toggles. I did say that I thought it was ill advised at 39 jumps to let go of the toggles to deal with a slider. I don't have a problem with people letting go of their toggles after release, but I wouldn't teach a student that it is the prefered method.

In response to someone else, I don't agree that you should teach student that riser maneuvers are done with toggles out of your hands. The rear riser turns that may save you are probably going to happen at a low altitude where letting go of the toggles is frankly stupid (yes, unless you are doing a freestyle swoop, nitpickers). And I've run into more than one student who thought they were supposed to let go of the toggles when doing riser turns. Again, not a good idea.

Sure, let go of your toggles if you need to, I just don't generally see the need.

- Dan G

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Yours was not the comment from the other thread I was referring to . . . it really doesn't matter who it was. What matters is that I had never heard anyone say that before in 23 years of jumping and I was interested in seeing where else it shows up.

I searched the SIM pdf for "toggles" and found numerous references. I found references to keeping hands in the toggles while performing riser maneuvers, but nowhere did I find any guidance on keeping hands in toggles once released.
Arrive Safely

John

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The rear riser turns that may save you are probably going to happen at a low altitude where letting go of the toggles is frankly stupid (yes, unless you are doing a freestyle swoop, nitpickers).



Or on opening or right after opening after "tracking" like a 30 jump jumper. Before they have a chance to even pick up their toggles.
--"When I die, may I be surrounded by scattered chrome and burning gasoline."

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Or on opening or right after opening after "tracking" like a 30 jump jumper. Before they have a chance to even pick up their toggles.



Oh, I totally agree. I think students should practice riser turns with toggles stowed and unstowed. However, if the toggles are already unstowed, I advise them to keep them in their hands unless they need to cutaway. When I run across a student that is letting go of their toggles after unstowing them, I make sure they know the disadvantages, which to answer the OP are:

1. It may be difficult, especially with velcroless toggles or when wearing gloves, to get your hands back in.
2. If you find yourself in a potential collision situation you do not have access to the turning technique you are most familiar with.
3. If you encounter turbulence you may wish to use toggle input to reinflate a partially collasped wing.

There may be other disadvantages. Some people may disagree with these. The OP asked what is being taught. If someone can convince me that other factors need to be considered, then I'm certainly open to looking at it from another perspective.

- Dan G

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I have never actually thought to teach one way or another. I personally do all my stowing, etc. before I release my brakes because the canopy just comes out of the sky to damn fast at full flight to do that stuff. For a student though, I don't see many good reasons for them to be letting go. I don't think its the end of the world if they want to fly around some up higher w/o them though.
~D
Where troubles melt like lemon drops Away above the chimney tops That's where you'll find me.
Swooping is taking one last poke at the bear before escaping it's cave - davelepka

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This statement was made by a couple of folks in the "loosen the chset strap" thread in General.

Reading Brian Germain's Parachute and its Pilot, has given me a habit of loosening my chest strap. Along with deep brakes (if flying downwind) and lifting legs, it has allowed me to return to the dropzone (just on time for 1000ft landing pattern, or at least close enough to get a landing pattern above an adacent farmfield that I'm able to walk from without the embarassment of a ride) from a really long multiple-kilometer spot, more than once... You really can't always do spotting with bigways and sometimes the climbout takes WAY too long ;)

However, I sometimes take the toggles and realize the spot is long, and then I have time to loosen my chest strap. So I just hold both toggles in one hand while I loosen with the other. I'm able to loosen my chest strap with one hand.

I never intentionally let go of my toggles -- don't want them getting stuck.

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Okay first some serious business. The Who Rocks…long live the Ox.

Second, I’ve seen a number of people let go of their toggles (including a student on his A license check out dive) and then the toggles get tangled. Then they pick them back up and pull down on them tying a knot in the brake line. Now they may have a cutaway. I think this is due to having the toggles pulled down and letting them “pop” back up and over when they initially let go of them. I’ve got no issue with an experienced skydiver letting go of toggles momentarily for a good reason, but for a student I don’t see any need and advise against it. I just don’t see any benefit to letting them go and do see some real potential drawbacks.

On a personal note, after deployment and clearing my airspace, I spend about 3 seconds opening my full face, collapsing my slider and loosing my chest strap a couple of inches and then unstow my toggles. I never let go of the toggles after that. If I’ve got to use my toggles in a hurry before getting around to that stuff, I can do all of the above with the toggles in my hands – albeit with some added inconvenience. The only time I can think that I’ve let go of my toggles after I’ve unstowed them is on demo type jumps where I need to confirm I’ve got a good canopy before unstowing a flag or something that takes two unencumbered hands. And then I’m very careful about letting go of the toggles such that they won’t get entangled with anything.
"We've been looking for the enemy for some time now. We've finally found him. We're surrounded. That simplifies things." CP

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I think this is due to having the toggles pulled down and letting them “pop” back up and over when they initially let go of them
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I’m very careful about letting go of the toggles such that they won’t get entangled with anything.



OK - now I understand the issue of the thread. I'm 100% in agreement with slotperfect's post

1 - I don't think one should ever just "drop" the toggles. That's silly. They could flip anywhere that way.

2 - It's very easy to put the toggles up in a controlled fashion. Easiest with velcro, but even with the stiffener one can push that into it's pocket very easily.

3 - worse case, you put your hands all the way up and then release them while against the line guide and they won't go anywhere. It's takes no less time than just 'dropping' them IMO.

4 - Lastly, EYEBALLS, if someone can grab their toggles and NOT LOOK at the lines before pulling them down, then they deserve the "knot in the brake line" you mentioned.

I normally do all my preps (visor, chest strap, etc) before taking my toggles. I can avoid a post opening issue, or any normal traffic, with riser inputs.

But I'm not one bit worried if I have to take my hands out of my toggles. I'll stow the toggles if I forgot the chest strap rather than keep them in my hands.

People need to do more CrW - a lot of canopy paranoia would go away if that happened.

...
Driving is a one dimensional activity - a monkey can do it - being proud of your driving abilities is like being proud of being able to put on pants

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People need to do more CrW - a lot of canopy paranoia would go away if that happened.



I would but I only own 2 hook knives. ;)
"We've been looking for the enemy for some time now. We've finally found him. We're surrounded. That simplifies things." CP

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I teach that you shouldn't take your hands out of the toggles unless you have something more important to do, like cut away or free yourself from entanglement. I don't see much benefit in taking your hands out of the toggles for ordinary flight, and indeed not having ready access to toggles could be bad for a beginner (a collision that resulted from them not being able to turn, for example.)

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People need to do more CrW - a lot of canopy paranoia would go away if that happened.



For real people.... It will fly straight... Your toggles aren't going to magically fall off. :S

Gosh people are paranoid!

Of course don't let them go under 1000 feet, thats common sense. I think after you get your "A", this should be another one of the cannopy familiarizations you should go through (up high of course). Front risers...rears...harness input...etc...

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As I was reading these posts I found myself having conflicting schools of thought. For experienced people I don't see it posing an inherent hazard. I do think both riser and harness turns can be done with the hands in the toggles. For students and novices I don't see any value in letting go of the toggles except for those already mentioned such as cutaway or entanglement.

On the other hand I could see a slim potential for panic if the student had trouble getting their hand back in the toggle. I would also just as soon keep them looking around instead of staring at their toggles while taking them off or putting them on.
"... this ain't a Nerf world."

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3 - worse case, you put your hands all the way up and then release them while against the line guide and they won't go anywhere. It's takes no less time than just 'dropping' them IMO.

4 - Lastly, EYEBALLS, if someone can grab their toggles and NOT LOOK at the lines before pulling them down, then they deserve the "knot in the brake line" you mentioned.


People need to do more CrW - a lot of canopy paranoia would go away if that happened.

I think that's a very good common sense approach. I train my students that the keeper ring is there for a purpose, and should they take their hands out of the toggle, it will stay right there. I also them to look at everything they grab, except the BOC, of course.

One should also remember, you don't have to have your hand through the loop to pull down. The top of the steering toggle makes an excellent "hard toggle", like the old school dowels.

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People need to do more CrW - a lot of canopy paranoia would go away if that happened.



For real people.... It will fly straight... Your toggles aren't going to magically fall off. :S

Gosh people are paranoid!


Look Ma, no toggles!! :o:ph34r:



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