johenrik

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Gear

  • Main Canopy Size
    119
  • Reserve Canopy Size
    128
  • AAD
    Cypres 2

Jump Profile

  • License
    D
  • License Number
    61774
  • Licensing Organization
    NAK
  • Years in Sport
    15
  • First Choice Discipline
    BASE Jumping
  • Second Choice Discipline
    Wing Suit Flying

Ratings and Rigging

  • AFF
    Instructor
  • USPA Coach
    Yes
  1. Of all wingsuits produced the last 15 years it is pretty much only the V5 that doesn't have any fin-like shape at the bottom of the suit. On all other suits the feet of the jumper sticks down doing the same as the fins does. I know you asked the question as a joke, but lots of inexperienced jumpers watch this and wonder the same thing. -Jo Henrik
  2. A good friend of mine with a few thousand skydives died on a wingsuit skydive using one of these last year. The official report is not out yet, but after what I have heard the helmet mount was the cause. Not trying to tell you what to do (or not to do), but just be careful. -Jo Henrik
  3. It depends on your skills and suit of course, but I usually feel my suit start flying pretty good after about 3 seconds. That should be about 50 meter of altitude. You should of course have quite a the room for margin of error and I usually don't jump anything that doesn't have a rock drop of 6-7 seconds (150 meters or so) but I am a pussy. Although a cliff in Norway with 4 seconds (about 75 meters) have been jumped quite a lot. This is pretty sketchy and your exits need to be perfect. People like to say that they fly a ratio of 3:1 (3 meters forward to one meter down) but most people fly about 2:1. Of course again all this depends on the suit and pilot. Also making lots of turns will cause your ratio to be worse. -Jo Henrik
  4. Everyone knows that wingsuits produce lift. The question is if a wingsuit can create more lift than the force of gravity pulling us down. -Jo Henrik
  5. I saw the jump form the ground and have to say that it looks completely different from the top than from the ground. Espen was flying a bit lower and do therefore lookes a lot further back on the video, but standing on the ground I would not tell who was the winner as it was so close. You can see all the times here: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10150912759615868&set=a.101066005867.101470.43724640867&type=3&theater and you will see that the six fastest times are all done in Vampires. That doesn't take away the fact that Tony won fair and square and did a great job in the contest. I also have to mention that Tony looked in a lot better shape hiking up the hills this year than last Congrats to the old man
  6. During the World Base Race this summer Odd Martin (Tiger) was flying very steady with a time between 19:30 and 19:40 and jumping a BlackJack 260. In his last jump of the competition he switched to a low profile rig (Hybrid i believe) and his time was suddenly 18:66. Not a huge difference, and it could be related to other stuff too, but it seems like increases are in around 0.5 to 1 second faster for everyone who switch on the 750 meter race. The speed walking up the mountain on the other hand increases a lot more :) -Jo Henrik
  7. johenrik

    Apache X

    isn't finding the best trajectory part of a race, wich makes your suit look fast ? Tony was flying outside of his lane giving him a shorter distance to fly than the other flyers. Tony (and some others) were clearly told that if they did this again they would be disqualified, but as it was more of a warm-up round measures wouldn't be taken. Regardless of him flying a shorter distance than the others he still showed himself as a fast flyer and the Apache X looks like an interesting suit. Marketing himself as the fastest in the race though is not fair. -Jo Henrik
  8. The problems isn't that the US is playing the global cop, the problem is that the way you are acting is not fair. Cops should follow the laws. If you want to be a cop you should enforce the laws, not help people break them. -Jo Henrik
  9. Does it matter? It's just as bad if it was done a year ago as if it's done today. Edited to add: Of course it matters for the people involved and should be stopped. But it doesn't matter for the case on how the US should be held responsible. -Jo Henrik
  10. Most countries in the west is pretty far from the extremity of the US in these matters. An example from my own country is this guy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mullah_Krekar . He is on the UN terrorist list and the Norwegian supreme court has judged him as a "threat to national security". Still he is allowed to go free i Norway and do whatever he pleases as we have laws against deporting people who faces the death penalty. Lots of people hate him here, but details of the law stands stronger than the political will. The big question is what is in his insurance file. It might be big enough that he will go free. I'm very curious of whats in there. Will one of the big conspiracy theories be proven? -Jo Henrik
  11. Nothing is clearly in these cases, but I see what you are saying and I don't think the world will react too much if he get's punished. The interesting thing is that in the Nuremberg Trials in 1945 the US (and it's allies) set a standard on how to deal with war crimes. German foot soldiers were trailed and executed for only following orders. The standard set was that if you know that your commander is committing war crimes you are obligated to deny following orders and report the issue in a way as it will get dealt with. You might therefore argue that the one who leaked the information had to do this, otherwise he might be held accountable to the war crimes he knew about. Damned if you do, damned if you don't. The American supreme court decided in "Gravel v. United States" that this is not illegal and it would be unconstitutional to prosecute anyone for release information obtained legally. This case was done based on the Pentagon Papers which showed that the government was just as deceitful back in the 70s as they are now. Unfortunately the American constitution doesn't mean much anymore if the people in charge want to do something. These papers obtained the information legally through a source just like the Wikleaks and any excuse used to prosecute Wikileaks can therefore be used on them. -Jo Henrik
  12. Luckily all European countries have signed an agreement not to transfer prisoners to countries if the prisoner may face capitol punishment. Not that this will happen anyway here though, Europeans still see the importance of freedom and democracy and I don't think any government who would agree to transfer a prisoner charged of free press would survive long. Even though I have lots of respect for Assange I think it almost would be worth it to sacrifice him in order to put Cheney in a Nigerian prison We have seen this for decades (especially the last decade) and aren't really that surprised. The deal is that finally we can bring these things up in a discussion with Americans and have solid evidence and avoid being told we are just talking about "crazy conspiratory theories made to hurt Americas effort on turning the world into a free and democratic place".
  13. That's what they should be doing, but American diplomats aren't following normal rules: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/nov/28/us-embassy-cables-spying-un This is illegal after the Vienna Convention and therefore prosecutable in 186 countries of the world (including the US). Clinton and Rice should be prosecution for this, and so should the diplomats, but they are slipping away because people are too busy being angry at the guy who revealed it. -Jo Henrik
  14. Quite a lot of American diplomats will be killed if the rest of the world was as blood thirsty as you. He was not in the US and American laws are not valid. Did you make sure you didn't break any Norwegian laws today? -Jo Henrik
  15. The leaks have proven that American diplomats do lots of spying. Do you think we in Norway should treat the American ambassador as a "state sponsored spy" and execute him? Because you don't think one set of rules in the world should work for America and another set of rules for everyone else, do you? -Jo Henrik