Manufacturer
Purpose
Main
Material
F-111
Cells
9
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The Falcon 9 cell canopy was introduced by Precision Aerodynamics in 1986. The canopy was designed utilizing the same successful "sizing techniques" which had become so popular in the Raven main/reserve. The idea of producing a different canopy size for a specific weight range was quickly picked up by other manufacturers.

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Go_Diego_go

0 of 0 members found this review helpful 0 / 0 members
  • 4
Good glide, Pretty good flare, Inexpensive
Very Brisk openings 1:1 or less

Great canopy besides the openings on heavier loadings. Although it opens really hard, it is a very reliable canopy and performs well in all wind conditions. So lets say as a starter canopy, awesome, but if you want something with a "snivel" look elsewhere. I would still recommend this canopy to a anyone.

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Randy4192

0 of 0 members found this review helpful 0 / 0 members
  • 4
Great experience
none

Their web-site is user friendly and easy to find. All the information you need is right on their site.

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JWADE0041

0 of 0 members found this review helpful 0 / 0 members
  • 3
soft opening, cheap
flare sucks, f111material.

I just got done doing three jumps on a fairly used falcon 215, each time I barried one of the toggles I would get into a half turn before the canopy nose fairly bad, (scared the shit out of me) leaving me with minor line twist. Now I do take into consideration the thing just might be hooked up wrong, but like I said to my cousin after I got down, im never jumping that thing again. It would be one thing if it just happened once but, every single time I barried(sp?) a toggle it did it. Like I said could be the way it is hooked up, could be too old who knows, Im not a rigger.

But other than that it has a nice glide, I'm jumping it at a 1.0 wingloading ration so it does alright, the flare is a little weak on it but I am to say that that is cause from the f111 material. if your looking for a first main go ahead and spend a little extra cash and get a zp canopy. you'll enjoy it much more.

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coldsteel

0 of 0 members found this review helpful 0 / 0 members
  • 5
Precise landings,easy to pack, nice openings,price
None, given this is a F-111 1990's 9-cell design

I think this is a legitimate choice for a "first canopy" or "transition canopy" for several reasons. First it's easy to pack....it packs small and packs ridiculously easy compared to snot-slippery, frustrating ZP canopies. It's relatively easy to slip this puppy into a Javelin J-4 bag, and I stuggled to put a new FCI Sentry 210 and PD Silhouette 210 into the same container.

Secondly,the Falcon 215, loaded 1:1, zips right along with the similarly loaded non-elliptical ZP designs. Flying today, I experienced a full blown, breath-taking but controllable, dynamic stalls at altitude that ZP's won't do, and deeply braked turns were accompanied by very interesting accelerated stall behavior that you won't see with similar-size ZP's. At the bottom end of the dive, I found that I could accuratly do standups in the hoola hoop target that I just glided over with ZP's. The flare was just fine. This is not a serious disc stomping accuracy parachute but I wouldn't hesitate to do "Demo Accuracy" into a tight DZ with it.

Did I mention that this canopy opens nice and soft without snivelling? I use the standard Precision "psycho pack" techique and it works well. I have also flat packed the canopy with similar success. Precision built the canopy that I jumped to military standards, Dacron lines and bullet-proof fabric construction.

Finally, George Galloway at Precision has a nice supply of these silver brutes that he built for a foreign military (who in turn, backed out of the contract). You might be able to get a great deal on one! Loaded 1.0 or more these canopies would make excellent student canopies.

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mangledspoon

0 of 0 members found this review helpful 0 / 0 members
  • 2
It was cheap?
flare sucks, openings suck

I bought a Falcon 150 canopy with almost 500 jumps on it, and initially it seemed to fly ok - I did eight test jumps before buying it.
With time and experience I've discovered that openings are almost ALWAYS very brisk (to the point I've stopped looking up after opening because it hurts) unless I roll the nose a lot... and then the openings still suck but are at least not as painful.
My landings aren't great on it either, I've been told this is due to the canopy not me... the flare in it sucks.

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377

0 of 0 members found this review helpful 0 / 0 members
  • 5
Very good flight characteristics, great flare too.
F111 instead of ZP fabric

Falcons fly a lot like Triathlons, very stable and predictable. Falcons have a surprisingly strong flare for an F 111 canopy. Construction quality is just flat out superb, very neat sewing on every single point, even bartacks are cosmetically perfect. The quality may be one reason Falcons seem to last so long and still fly and open well. If you cannot afford a Triathlon, buy a Falcon for your first canopy. You will not be disappointed. Used Falcons in great shape regularly sell in the 300-400 dollar price range.

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LilZilla

0 of 0 members found this review helpful 0 / 0 members
  • 4
easy openings and fun to fly
none

For a first canopy this is not a bad deal. I began jumping my falcon 175 after 40 jumps and loved it. It performed very well in the sky and was very fun to fly. Compared to those huge student status canopies, this canopy flies a little quicker and performs alittle more agressively but still remains to be very forgiving. My exit weight is about 195 lbs. and exceeded the max. weight limit on that canopy by about 20 lbs. For me, the landings where a little hard. Although, in 10 - 15 mhp winds, I've had some of the best landings I had ever had with that canopy. Overall, I was very pleased with the canopy and had a lot of fun while jumping it.

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nicksoccer20

0 of 0 members found this review helpful 0 / 0 members
  • 5
Good glide, strong flare
Openings brisk, uncomfortable

My falcon 215 tends to open fast. Not realy hard just fast a little uncomfortable. Not painfull so I guess I can't complain to much but no matter how much I role the nose it opens the same way each time. It is nice to land compared to my last canopy a 7 cell. Overall a decent canopy fun to fly reliable and a strong flare for a f111 canopy.

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Stacy

0 of 0 members found this review helpful 0 / 0 members
  • 5

Much more glide and forward speed than my paracommander!! flare is a lot better too. I find it much easier to get back from a long spot with the falcon than a T-10.

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admin

0 of 0 members found this review helpful 0 / 0 members

I owned a Falcon 235 which I bought used with about 400 jumps on it when I had about 120 jumps. At the time I weighed about 200. It took me a while to learn to land it on no-wind days, but I never had a hard opening, the worst was an occassioinal 90 - 180 twist (flatpacked - usually quickly). That canopy has Dacron lines, which may have something to do with the soft openings. When I moved to a Batwing about 450 jumps later, I sold it with a lot of regret. That same canopy is now on its fourth owner, each having put about 400 jumps on it. As far as I know the total now is roughly 1500 with ZERO malfunctions and even more amazing, still the original lines. I trust it enough to use a Falcon 195 as a Reserve. Nuff said.
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admin

0 of 0 members found this review helpful 0 / 0 members

I started jumping a Falcon 175 when I had 220 jumps. My exit weight was 2lb below the recommended maximum. I enjoyed jumping the Falcon and found it able to deal with all the jumping conditions I subjected it to, including some very tight and marginal display jumps. I found it easy to pack, and able to take all manner of trashy pack-jobs and open reliably. I continued to jump it for a further 550 jumps, before upgrading to a Sabre 150.

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