swoopfly 5 #1 January 24, 2013 Why are tandem instructors glorified skydivers? they fly bigger than student size canopies and half the time land on their butt. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
peek 20 #2 January 24, 2013 QuoteWhy are tandem instructors glorified skydivers? They fly bigger than student size canopies and half the time land on their butt. I can't remember where anyone other than one of my tandem students has "glorified" me! If you know how to get the rest of the skydiving population to think I'm cool, by all means let me know. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
wolfriverjoe 1,371 #3 January 25, 2013 50 pounds of shit on your back, 200 pounds of stupid on the front, 5 handles and a pilot chute in tow. What could possibly go wrong?"There are NO situations which do not call for a French Maid outfit." Lucky McSwervy "~ya don't GET old by being weak & stupid!" - Airtwardo Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jtiflyer 0 #4 January 25, 2013 Quote50 pounds of shit on your back, 200 pounds of stupid on the front, 5 handles and a pilot chute in tow. What could possibly go wrong? you forgot having a different wing loading on any every jump. As for the OP. Man up and try it and you might find the answer. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DougH 270 #5 January 25, 2013 Quote Why are tandem instructors glorified skydivers? they fly bigger than student size canopies and half the time land on their butt. Because if you aren't a TI, and you bring your girlfriend or mom to the DZ, they strap on to US. Because we are the whores that power the brothel, that powers your twin turbine fun. Because we make this shit look goooooooood. "The restraining order says you're only allowed to touch me in freefall" =P Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
promise5 17 #6 January 25, 2013 Quote 50 pounds of shit on your back, 200 pounds of stupid on the front, 5 handles and a pilot chute in tow. What could possibly go wrong? Woah!!! I do not weigh 200 lbs!! and i might be blonde but far from stupidLet's not bring up the smirnoff's mixup. Just had to add that. Now back to the threadNo matter how slowly you say oranges it never sounds like gullible. Believe me I tried. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
diablopilot 2 #7 January 25, 2013 QuoteWhy are tandem instructors glorified skydivers? they fly bigger than student size canopies and half the time land on their butt. Yeah, they fly those canopies at anywhere from a .8 to 1.7 wingloadings on a regular basis in every weather condition that you won't jump in, while getting thrown up on, snotted on, landing regularly to PRO rating standards, while teaching the mostly uninformed and keeping them involved including having them assist in the landings. But make no thought of the hundreds to thousands of skydived the made to get to the rating, or the time they spent in the sport watching everything that could possibly go wrong. Instead why not belittle the guys and girls that keep the financial side of this sport alive and afford the turbine jump ships and amenities that you enjoy daily?---------------------------------------------- You're not as good as you think you are. Seriously. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rover 9 #8 January 25, 2013 Quote Why are tandem instructors glorified skydivers? they fly bigger than student size canopies and half the time land on their butt. The kind of comment one might expect from an owner operator on his own gear. 2 wrongs don't make a right - but 3 lefts do. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
swoopfly 5 #9 January 25, 2013 QuoteQuote50 pounds of shit on your back, 200 pounds of stupid on the front, 5 handles and a pilot chute in tow. What could possibly go wrong? you forgot having a different wing loading on any every jump. As for the OP. Man up and try it and you might find the answer. I am a tandem I with 750+ tandems so i think i can say i have maned up and tried it. I have made 24 tandems in a day, in all weather conditions(gotta eat). i dont think i forgot the fact that the wing loading changes. For some reason After i became a Ti i didnt like most feel the need to strut around telling B liscence holders what to do and listen to me because i am a glorified skydiver now that i take 260 pound men on tandems in high wind. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jerry81 10 #10 January 25, 2013 Quote Because we are the whores that power the brothel, that powers your twin turbine fun. Thank you, sir! Just what I needed to hear before heading out to the dz again.Seriously though, I am soo stealing that quote! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TomNoonan 1 #11 January 25, 2013 Quote"200 lbs of stupid" Not replying to you directly, more of a general statement. I've never understood the "200 lbs of stupid" comment. I hear it occasionally, but it always puzzles me. I'd have to check my numbers, but I think I've made 4000 tandem jumps, not a huge number by today's standards, but enough to be able to evaluate things I believe. I'm gonna guess I have made those jumps in probably 8-10 different countries over the last decade, and I can't think of a single instance of looking down and seeing "stupid" hanging off of me under canopy. I guess my point is, if I have one, it's that our students are only as smart or "stupid" as we train them to be. If I were ever to look down and see "200 lbs of stupid" hanging off me, I would consider it a failure on my part, not theirs. As an industry, we must remain vigilant in training our students to the best of our ability, otherwise someday we may collectively lose the privilege of doing so. I know some TIs use that phrase as a joke, but there are those out there that genuinely believe it. Tandem skydiving is a serious business, a training business, and at it's core, it is a responsibility business.......we are in the business of acting responsibly. That responsibility starts with treating every student we work with as thought they are the most important person in our lives and training them accordingly, because for that period of time that we re with them, they are the most important person in our lives.Namaste, Tom Noonan www.everest-skydive.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
skydivex3m 0 #12 January 25, 2013 We just don't have a lot of grateful fun jumpers where we work Jerry.. But still a good quote!https://icarusanddaedalusadventures.blogspot.com/ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
airtwardo 6 #13 January 26, 2013 Quote Quote Quote 50 pounds of shit on your back, 200 pounds of stupid on the front, 5 handles and a pilot chute in tow. What could possibly go wrong? you forgot having a different wing loading on any every jump. As for the OP. Man up and try it and you might find the answer. I am a tandem I with 750+ tandems so i think i can say i have maned up and tried it. I have made 24 tandems in a day, in all weather conditions(gotta eat). i dont think i forgot the fact that the wing loading changes. For some reason After i became a Ti i didnt like most feel the need to strut around telling B liscence holders what to do and listen to me because i am a glorified skydiver now that i take 260 pound men on tandems in high wind. Yeah yeah yeah...ya should have been there before they figured out adding a drogue would make both the F1-11 & the TI last for than 50 jumps! ~ If you choke a Smurf, what color does it turn? ~ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
billbooth 10 #14 January 27, 2013 Quote50 pounds of shit on your back, 200 pounds of stupid on the front, 5 handles and a pilot chute in tow. What could possibly go wrong? I like that. Truer words have never been spoken. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JohnMitchell 14 #15 January 27, 2013 Quote For some reason After i became a Ti i didnt like most feel the need to strut around telling B liscence holders what to do and listen to me because i am a glorified skydiver now that i take 260 pound men on tandems in high wind; For some reason I didn't either. But I've done enough first aid on injured people and seen enough dead skydivers to know a thing or two, and when I see someone who looks like they could use a little advice or help, I'll give it to them. If they don't want it, that's fine too. I've seen the results of people who don't want to listen or learn. Has someone recently played Skygod around you? Because you seem pretty put off by something. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
popsjumper 2 #16 January 27, 2013 Quote 50 pounds of shit on your back, 200 pounds of stupid on the front, 5 handles and a pilot chute in tow. What could possibly go wrong? Even though I cringed at the reference to the student as stupid.My reality and yours are quite different. I think we're all Bozos on this bus. Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
popsjumper 2 #17 January 27, 2013 Quote Quote For some reason After i became a Ti i didnt like most feel the need to strut around telling B liscence holders what to do and listen to me because i am a glorified skydiver now that i take 260 pound men on tandems in high wind; For some reason I didn't either. But I've done enough first aid on injured people and seen enough dead skydivers to know a thing or two, and when I see someone who looks like they could use a little advice or help, I'll give it to them. If they don't want it, that's fine too. I've seen the results of people who don't want to listen or learn. Has someone recently played Skygod around you? Because you seem pretty put off by something. I can certainly understand the OPs point. I'm not a TI (you guys have bigger balls and more stamina and my hat is off to you) but I saw the attitude every day. More than once I had to tell new TIs, "Just because you have TI rating doesn't make you any smarter than you were before." More than once, I had to tell other TIs, "You handle he tandem students, I'll handle the AFF students." From my experience, the TI 'skygod' attitude does not seem to be prevalent but it's common enough to be quite noticeable. YMMV Oh...BTW. Thanks you guys for financing the turbine rides. My reality and yours are quite different. I think we're all Bozos on this bus. Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SkymonkeyONE 3 #18 January 27, 2013 QuoteWhy are tandem instructors glorified skydivers? they fly bigger than student size canopies and half the time land on their butt. I don't get it. After reading your own response later in the thread which says you ARE a Tandem Instructor, I"m curious what your thinking is. Are you trying to belittle OTHER tandem instructors who you see as shitty examples, or are you throwing ALL of us under the bus (yourself included)? Tom Noonan made a good point. Students are as crappy or good as you train them to be. Others made the good point that we, as tandem instructors, carry a tremendous burden. Chuck Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JohnMitchell 14 #19 January 27, 2013 Quote More than once I had to tell new TIs, "Just because you have TI rating doesn't make you any smarter than you were before." More than once, I had to tell other TIs, "You handle he tandem students, I'll handle the AFF students." From my experience, the TI 'skygod' attitude does not seem to be prevalent but it's common enough to be quite noticeable. Thanks for the input. At other DZ's I don't mingle with the staff while they're working with students, so I wouldn't see it if it was a problem. At my home DZ I don't think I've seen much of a problem. Most of our TI's are also AFF I's, so they're pretty competent instructors. The ones that aren't seem pretty mellow. I do know that all of our staff have been directed by management to look around and keep an eye out for trouble, whether working or not. Chest straps, gear checks, landing patterns, exit spacing; any of that is up for critique if we see something we don't like. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ufk22 32 #20 January 27, 2013 Jeez, a skydiver that thinks he knows more than what he does????? Why would you limit that to Tandem I's??????This is the paradox of skydiving. We do something very dangerous, expose ourselves to a totally unnecesary risk, and then spend our time trying to make it safer. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
popsjumper 2 #21 January 28, 2013 QuoteJeez, a skydiver that thinks he knows more than what he does????? Why would you limit that to Tandem I's?????? He's not. He's a TI so the question is relevant to him.My reality and yours are quite different. I think we're all Bozos on this bus. Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
tkhayes 154 #22 January 28, 2013 Along with what Tom Noonan said, apparently you do not have a tandem rating, nor have you had to deal with a real serious malfunction with 200lbs strapped on the front of you. There is a lot of responsibility to any tandem jump and there is far more shit to go wrong than on any other 'normal' skydive out there. And we are expected to perform near flawlessly every jump because that is what the customer expects. So the pressure is, in fact, 'on'. I'd like to see you deal with the 150+MPH high-speed bag-lock on a Vector with a collapsed drogue that did not cutaway one side, but dumped the RSL and reserve into the trailing main resulting in the main-reserve entanglement and line knot the size of a football which then turned into the main starting to deploy with the already spinning reserve with a customer on the front who DOES actually know that something is wrong, and then flying that reserve with one brake at 75% and pulling off a stand-up landing in the peas under a malfunctioned reserve with half a main trailing behind it. Because that is what I did - and for maybe just a short moment in my life, I was in fact 'glorified'. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
stratostar 5 #23 January 28, 2013 Quoteand for maybe just a short moment in my life, I was in fact 'glorified'. Oh someone paid for your beer at the bar....you can't pay for kids schoolin' with love of skydiving! ~ Airtwardo Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jimjumper 25 #24 January 28, 2013 We all know it couldn't possibly have been a problem with the rig. Most likely the TI pulled the handles out of sequence! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SkymonkeyONE 3 #25 January 28, 2013 Quote I'd like to see you deal with the 150+MPH high-speed bag-lock on a Vector with a collapsed drogue that did not cutaway one side, but dumped the RSL and reserve into the trailing main resulting in the main-reserve entanglement and line knot the size of a football which then turned into the main starting to deploy with the already spinning reserve with a customer on the front who DOES actually know that something is wrong, and then flying that reserve with one brake at 75% and pulling off a stand-up landing in the peas under a malfunctioned reserve with half a main trailing behind it. Because that is what I did - and for maybe just a short moment in my life, I was in fact 'glorified'. SOLID!!! I didn't realize you were also in that club, TK. Me and Eric Butts will have a toast to that this afternoon. Greetings from Skydive San Marcos. Chuck Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites