billdo 0 #1 November 12, 2002 I'm getting a new Tonysuit and I'm lost as to the bootie selection Reg. Bootie: has 3 panels, with a leather sole. It curves towards your ankle for better control. Reg. XL Bootie: Has 3 panels and a shock cord around the foot that engulfs the entire foot. Mega Bootie: Has 1 panel with a leather sole. It forms a straight line knee to toe. Mega XL Bootie: Has 1 panel and a shock cord around the foot that engulfs the entire foot. Any ideas or suggestions would be appreciated. Thanks! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
weid14 0 #2 November 12, 2002 Quote I'm getting a new Tonysuit and I'm lost as to the bootie selection Reg. Bootie: has 3 panels, with a leather sole. It curves towards your ankle for better control. Reg. XL Bootie: Has 3 panels and a shock cord around the foot that engulfs the entire foot. Mega Bootie: Has 1 panel with a leather sole. It forms a straight line knee to toe. Mega XL Bootie: Has 1 panel and a shock cord around the foot that engulfs the entire foot. Any ideas or suggestions would be appreciated. Thanks! you want something that is going to give you a staight line from knee to toe, and not collapse against your shin, making a "sail" so you can catch air with them. I'd go with the mega bootie if I were to buy that suit, but then again, I'm a Bev Suit fan..... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AggieDave 6 #3 November 13, 2002 Although I'm not a RW guy, a friend is a pretty hard core one (skydive U. coach, went to a couple tunnel camps, etc), he ordered a Tony suit with the Mega Booties, did a couple jumps on it and sent it back to get the regular booties put on it. He found that all that material was moving his feet around and just plain annoying.--"When I die, may I be surrounded by scattered chrome and burning gasoline." Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
drenaline 0 #4 November 13, 2002 I bought the regular one, they are easier to control, when I borrow my friends mega bootie jumpsuit makes my movements kinda stupid. If its your first jumpsuit go for the regular bootie. Are you sure they are selling the XL bootie? I know that they discontinue the airspeed ones but dunno about the XL. HISPA 21 www.panamafreefall.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
PhreeZone 15 #5 November 13, 2002 A single seam provides a MUCH more powerful bootie that takes some getting used to. The benifit is that if you can master it you will have a lot of leg awareness since on the normal bootie a tad bit of sloppyness does'nt matter too much, but on the more powerful bootie an inch makes a lot of difference. I tried a bootie suit then a mega suit and was blown away by how unstable the Mega suit made me but once I got it quieted down... super powerful and able to make snap moves like I could'nt believe.Yesterday is history And tomorrow is a mystery Parachutemanuals.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AggieDave 6 #6 November 13, 2002 I wouldn't know, I'm not a RW guy (yet), but the guy I was talking about is a very good RW guy, has something like around 10hrs of coached tunnel time and was personally asked to come to the Skydive U. coaches course, and I was just repeating what he said. --"When I die, may I be surrounded by scattered chrome and burning gasoline." Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bobsoutar 0 #7 November 13, 2002 Mega bootees may be best for you if you mainly do smaller formations (8-way and under). They take some getting used to but are more efficient. They are also ok for bigger stuff - although a lot of people prefer to take life a bit slower with normal bootees. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
weid14 0 #8 November 13, 2002 QuoteAlthough I'm not a RW guy, a friend is a pretty hard core one (skydive U. coach, went to a couple tunnel camps, etc), he ordered a Tony suit with the Mega Booties, did a couple jumps on it and sent it back to get the regular booties put on it. He found that all that material was moving his feet around and just plain annoying. it was moving his feet around because it was catching a lot of air as they are designed to do, when I first learned to really fly with my legs, my calves would get really sore from working my feet into the equation. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ron 7 #9 November 14, 2002 Quote I wouldn't know, I'm not a RW guy (yet), but the guy I was talking about is a very good RW guy, has something like around 10hrs of coached tunnel time and was personally asked to come to the Skydive U. coaches course, and I was just repeating what he said. Hell almost everyone has been personally asked to come to the SDU coaches courseGood course, but not hard to get into. Ron"No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms." -- Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson Papers, 334 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AggieDave 6 #10 November 14, 2002 Quote Good course, but not hard to get into. *shrug* What do I know, I'm a freeflier. Eitherway, he's a really good flier and I value his opinion.--"When I die, may I be surrounded by scattered chrome and burning gasoline." Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SkymonkeyONE 3 #11 November 19, 2002 Skydive U? Didn't that operation go tits up when Danny left? Anyway, I currently own two Michigan comp suits with knife edge booties. They are big, single-seam suits and did take some getting used to as compared to my older suits with "standard" booties. After a short time, though, I really appreciated the increased leg power offered by them. The only thing that makes me nuts is the "windvaning" under canopy (I don't pull my booties off to land). The larger booties also require a different swoop stop (in the freefall vernacular) when diving down to a large formation. Chuck Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites