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CanEHdian

Wet canopy at a pond swoop comp

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Just curious... pond swoopers can find themselves with a wet canopy during a competition. So what do they do? How long will they let it dry before jumping again? Do they actually have that time in between rounds? How wet can a canopy still be when you pack it and what are (if any) the safety issues involved?

Cheers,
CanEHdian
Time's flying, and so am I...
(69-way, 108-way and 138/142-way Freefly World Records)


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I've pulled my self and my canopy out of the pond after complete submersion. Picked the canopy up by the tail to shake the water out. packed it up and jumped it. It works just fine.

Edit: This was just a splash down at our local pond and wasn't during any competition.
My grammar sometimes resembles that of magnetic refrigerator poetry... Ghetto

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Just curious... pond swoopers can find themselves with a wet canopy during a competition.



Just pack it and jump it. I found the canopy dried out quickly with the air flowing over it.

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Do they actually have that time in between rounds?



Not normally enough for the canopy to dry on the ground.

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How wet can a canopy still be when you pack it and what are (if any) the safety issues involved?



Mine was soaked (as a few other competitors). I didn't notice any significant difference in the way the canopy flew. Someone did tell me once that they thought the HMA and Vectrans lifespan was reduced with getting the lines wet, but I don't know if that's fact or fiction.

What did suck was doing the hop n pops in wet cloths (brrr!) ;)

Blue skies
Ian
Performance Designs Factory Team

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Just pack it and jump it. I found the canopy dried out quickly with the air flowing over it.



I guess my question doesn't apply to competition... But has anyone had a Cypres damaged by putting a wet main against it?

_Am
__

You put the fun in "funnel" - craichead.

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What did suck was doing the hop n pops in wet cloths (brrr!) ;)

Blue skies
Ian



Wet shoes... those take forever to dry =p~

My experience was suck after competition was over & I got home, pulled my reserve out to dry, and found that the ink/dye on the red reserve data label had run right off the label and onto the yellow fabric... Also the red dye from the thread in the bar tacks had run down the spectra lines.

Chris W.

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Wet shoes... those take forever to dry =p~



Oh hell yes!

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My experience was suck after competition was over & I got home, pulled my reserve out to dry, and found that the ink/dye on the red reserve data label had run right off the label and onto the yellow fabric... Also the red dye from the thread in the bar tacks had run down the spectra lines.



Wow, now I've never heard of that happening. What reserve was it? Is that damage that you'd need to worry about or is it cosmetic only?

Blue skies
Ian
Performance Designs Factory Team

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I guess my question doesn't apply to competition... But has anyone had a Cypres damaged by putting a wet main against it?



I've never heard of it happening. I do hear of people who don't even take their cypres out for comps, get totally soaked, and don't have any problems. Not for the faint of heart though IMO :)
Blue skies
Ian
Performance Designs Factory Team

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Please don't get your canopy wet.

If your swooping skills are not to the point where you can guarantee that you will end up dry, stay away from the pond. Water can shrink the tapes and disort your airfoil. This can change the opening characteristics, as well as the flight performance.

Not to mention hitting the water at high speed can actually kill you...

Pretend it's concrete.
Instructional Videos:www.AdventureWisdom.com
Keynote Speaking:www.TranscendingFEAR.com
Canopies and Courses:www.BIGAIRSPORTZ.com

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Please don't get your canopy wet.

If your swooping skills are not to the point where you can guarantee that you will end up dry, stay away from the pond.


For once I don't agree with you Brian. I can't guarantee I won't get wet. That's part of the fun any way. Dialing in landings so well as to skim the feet across the waters surface is very exciting. I've been fully submerged one time and have nearly blown it a few times since. I see no reason to stay away from the pond if you are already a proficient swooper.

My take on swooping a pond is ... you should already be a good swooper before trying to swoop a pond. Vertical impacts with water can be deadly. Horizontal impact is almost always less harmful. It doesn't make it safe but the tendency is to skip across the water like a water ski crash. Those can hurt too.

Then there's plain ole going for it and running out of steam and sinking into the water in embarrassment.

I don't plan to land intentionally in water. I'm fairly proficient at pond swooping, but I know for a fact I can blow it easily enough.

That said, I understand the sentiment, but it rules out everybody from swooping the pond.
My grammar sometimes resembles that of magnetic refrigerator poetry... Ghetto

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As with all things in life, you are all free to choose your own path. I am simply offering the truth that water is not good for your equipment. If you choose to get your stuff wet, I would be more than happy to build you another parachute.

Please take what I am saying the way it was intended:

I don't want my friends to get hurt, or follow a path that might lead them to a bum trip.

That's all I am saying.
Instructional Videos:www.AdventureWisdom.com
Keynote Speaking:www.TranscendingFEAR.com
Canopies and Courses:www.BIGAIRSPORTZ.com

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Please don't get your canopy wet.

If your swooping skills are not to the point where you can guarantee that you will end up dry, stay away from the pond. Water can shrink the tapes and disort your airfoil. This can change the opening characteristics, as well as the flight performance.



What about those of us in the northwest who often get their canopies soaked (completely dripping wet) jumping in rainy weather and landing on soggy grass? I've never heard anyone complain that their canopy didn't work as well later. Wet canopies open just fine though. If I didn't jump in the wet I'd miss half my winter hop & pops.
Sometimes you eat the bear..............

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A wet canopy is not a concern if it's dried soon after and preferably by a deployment and flight.

Water does not cause synthetic tapes to shrink. (Heat alone causes nylon to shrink, i.e a wet canopy stored in a hot trunk can shrink.) We had this problem during the days of cotton and other natural tapes. Today it is not a problem with nylon.

With respect to lines, all wet lines and fabric, natural or synthetic will attract dirt and dirt causes wear. Go jump it to dry it.

If you get your stuff wet, drain the water, air for a short time and take it right back up for a hop-n-pop, the flight will dry it in the safest manner.

Chris

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I hear ya. I am speaking of the gradual changes that become the difference between putting 1000 jumps on your canopy or 5000. These things are expensive, ya know?

If you put a frog in a pot of cool water, and then put the pot on the stove (I know this is gross), the frog will stay in the water until it is cooked. The change is gradual, so the frog never notices.
Instructional Videos:www.AdventureWisdom.com
Keynote Speaking:www.TranscendingFEAR.com
Canopies and Courses:www.BIGAIRSPORTZ.com

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Actually, I have found even pre-shrunk type III will shrink up to 10% over time. I know the party line is that tapes don't shrink, but compelling empirical data suggests otherwise.

It is a matter of the weave contacting. Although a single nylon fiber requires heat to change dimensionally, the collective synergy of woven goods exhibits a shrinking phenoninon. Just measure the leading edge tapes of your canopies when new, and compare them to old ones. QED
Instructional Videos:www.AdventureWisdom.com
Keynote Speaking:www.TranscendingFEAR.com
Canopies and Courses:www.BIGAIRSPORTZ.com

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Agreed ... The weave will draw together, when left to dry... but the opening shock redistributes the fibers, (Stretches the weave back).

I think the best advice for anyone with a wet canopy is to drain, pack, jump (and as my shampoo bottle says... repeat!)

Cheers Brian!

Chris

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I think the best advice for anyone with a wet canopy is to drain, pack, jump (and as my shampoo bottle says... repeat!)

Cheers Brian!

Chris



You actaully read the bottle Chris?? :)

Scott
I read somewhere to learn is to remember and I've learned we all forgot

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