darkwing

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Jump Profile

  • Home DZ
    Raeford,NC
  • License
    D
  • License Number
    4164
  • Licensing Organization
    USPA
  • Number of Jumps
    2410
  • Years in Sport
    37
  • First Choice Discipline
    Formation Skydiving
  • First Choice Discipline Jump Total
    2200
  • Second Choice Discipline
    Freeflying
  • Second Choice Discipline Jump Total
    10

Ratings and Rigging

  • Rigging Back
    Master Rigger
  • Rigging Chest
    Master Rigger
  • Rigging Seat
    Master Rigger

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  1. I have a 1954 White portable forward/reverse/zigzag that I bought in 1974. Still works great.
  2. Quick answer: you can’t write too much. I started jumping in 1973 and even by the standards of that time I wrote a lot. Wish I had written more. Sometimes I wrote the tail numbers of aircraft I jumped. Wish I had always done that. People you jumped with. The plan and the reality. Anything unusual that happened (went through a flock of birds in free fall, almost hit a plane when tracking, another jumper ended up inside my fully open main canopy and his was fully open too (Pete Hill), a volcano blew up (Mt. St. Helen’s), got knocked out by videographer…)
  3. Short answer: buy a sewing machine and learn to sew. You’ll need that skill to be a rigger anyway, and it has uses outside the rigging realm. Forward/reverse/zigzag. Portable, old model with metal parts is best. Start making and repairing things that don’t require a riggers ticket. Learn how to maintain the machine. I started rigging in the 70s mostly because I wanted to know how things work. Professionally, I became a physicist, not unrelated. in the mid-80s I became a master rigger, although I was never terribly active by most master rigger standards. It was absolutely worth it, in intellectual satisfaction sense, if not in a financial sense.
  4. Late 70s - Henley Hummers (Henley Aerodrome, and Ozmo paracenter, Athol, Idaho) 70s-80s some I’ve forgotten early 2000s - Gravity Bomb (Blue Sky Adventures, St George, SC)
  5. Some people are cutaway magnets. One such guy, experienced people would watch him pack, and just shrug, “yup I can see why he cuts away a lot”. A single cutaway in a thousand or two jumps doesn’t mean anything diagnostically useful. Someone cutting away several times in a few thousand jumps has something going on. It could be packing technique, maintenance problems, or experimental or particularly edgy gear. People commonly want something to blame every malfunction on, but not every malfunction has a blame-able factor. Remember, you are throwing a wad of fabric and strings into a turbulent, high speed air flow. Shit’s gonna happen. The reverse scenario, is worth considering too...for uncommon events (cutaways for people who have none of the aforementioned risk multipliers) there will be cases of people going much longer than average between events. That doesn’t mean (necessarily) that they have anything special going for them other than the luck of the draw. -- Jeff My Skydiving History
  6. Having a lot of experience building for the military market is a plus. Looking at the photos on the web site they have a range of models and sizes. Nothing about any of them looks exotic or innovative. I suspect they are very similar to many existing canopies, but you really need to have riggers and experienced jumpers have a look at them. You might ask them if you can demo the canopy. Or if a group of you can try it. If they want to break into the local market, then they should be eager to let people try them. Merely having good prices isn't enough. -- Jeff My Skydiving History
  7. As I recall, in the mid-1990s at a boogie in Boise, we did a test dummy drop using a reserve that had been packed and sealed for 50 years. It did fine. We weren’t surprised. It had been in a loft and someone found it. -- Jeff My Skydiving History
  8. what others said... But you can reline it, take out some reinforcements, put on a slider, re-do the bridle attachment, and generally make it lower bulk. A long time ago, like late 1970s we did that with a canopy from ParaFlite known colloquially as a baby-plane. We renamed it the "Scare-a-plane" and put some jumps on it. The bottom line is that it isn't really worth it, unless you just like messing around with rigging stuff and jumping a canopy that doesn't open or fly as well as a modern canopy. -- Jeff My Skydiving History
  9. I don't think any experienced jumper even thinks about breathing. I don't. If there is a problem I think it is anxiety related, which doesn't make it not real, it just means the solution is to convince yourself that there isn't a problem. At worst, that comes with a few more jumps. -- Jeff My Skydiving History
  10. I was on a 4-way team that had a guy more than 60 pounds (27 kg) heavier. He was also a tandem Instructor. I was about your weight. Yes, he wore a baggy jumpsuit, but you need to think more broadly. Are there some jumping situations where your size is an advantage? Yes. We did a lot of fun hybrid stuff over the years. -- Jeff My Skydiving History
  11. I built a bunch (dozens) of canopies many years ago. I figured for the first one, the best thing to do was copy what I considered to be the best flying canopy of the time (a 7-cell 189 foil). It required much more intricate sewing than others I could have built, but I wanted to get the sewing down before I worried about aerodynamics. I still recommend that approach. I did a lot of seat-of-the-pants engineering and even my very weirdest canopy flew very nicely. It was a flat-rigged, double-humped, 5-cell, whose first jump was the day Mt. St. Helens blew up. We were in the air, watching the giant cloud of ash and lightning come toward us. I built it out of super cheap, really crappy (tear strength of about 3 pounds) but lightweight fabric. I just hoped it held together for at least one jump, so I could evaluate its performance. It flew and landed quite well I put a small number of jumps on it and sold it really cheap to a teammate, who put hundreds (I think) of jumps on it. It is still in a box somewhere. One of the problems with you diving into 3-D fluid dynamic simulations is that so many little details such as deformities at line attachments, seam shrinkage, dimples in the top skin, inflation of cells, lines, the jumper, etc. are hard to model. Sure, you'd get some insight to trying a bunch of variations in an extremely complex parameter space, but remember, lots of people have been playing with this stuff for decades, and you might, but probably won't, stumble on anything that hasn't already been stumbled on. BUT, it is about the journey, not the destination. My advice, don't get bogged down. Just design and build and enjoy. Also, don't die. Jeff -- Jeff My Skydiving History
  12. I was there too. I have often wondered, over the years, if USPA went to the trouble of archiving and converting such historical videos. I competed in 4-way, and very casually in 8-way (I think, but maybe that was just in 1978) and would love to see video of any of the competition events. I'd think someone at USPA would quickly be able to supply an answer. -- Jeff My Skydiving History
  13. I semi-remember it from the 70's, and I probably remember more of the 70's than nearly any other Idaho jumper of the time. All I recall of it is the ending, "... we're the Beagle Boogie Boys, who the fuck are you?" -- Jeff My Skydiving History
  14. I keep hoping (or fearing) than some day one of these "who is it" posts will be me. -- Jeff My Skydiving History