Scubadivemaster

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Gear

  • Main Canopy Size
    150
  • Reserve Canopy Size
    160
  • AAD
    Cypres

Jump Profile

  • Home DZ
    CSC
  • License
    D
  • Licensing Organization
    USPA
  • Number of Jumps
    7000
  • Tunnel Hours
    2
  • Years in Sport
    18

Ratings and Rigging

  • AFF
    Instructor
  • Tandem
    Instructor
  • USPA Coach
    Yes

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  1. As a professional tandem instructor, whose job is to provide a safe experience for my student, I wonder why you would think this? I am able to easily communicate with my student in the airplane, I am protected in freefall, I have a logical place for my audible, and I am easily able to open my full face helmet to communicate during the canopy portion of the skydive. I am also able to close my helmet in the unlikely event that the student is sick or has body fluids streaming from them during the canopy portion, so I can land them safely without distraction. I have done tandems both ways, and after thousands of tandems, my belief is that the full face is the professional choice, though I understand others choose differently. What are your specific issues with using them? Other than “total bullshit”? And your level of experience would be interesting as well, just to see how that might play into your thought process? Not being argumentative, just truly curious. Edited: Just looked at some of your other posts. Nevermind, sorry to feed the trolls.
  2. No, but I will be watching this with interest. The 7 is a great camera, but is difficult to fit into our application, so must of us are still jumping well worn 4s.
  3. For those still using SLRs, can anyone suggest a tongue switch other than Conceptus? Failures on their switches are just too common to be using them as a professional, even though their customer service is great about replacing them. Replacement doesn't help the student who didn't get any photos of their jump because the switch failed, again.
  4. Thank you for taking the time to consider this and reply.
  5. This may not be technically possible, but here is a suggestion. The Incidents Forum is an important place to share information and to learn. However, in many, if not most, of the threads, the discussions move off point as posters bring up their favorite topics and try to insert them in a place that they know others will be reading. There are some members that post their opinions in every incident thread, whether relevant in any way or not. There is no "cost" to posting, so many seem to interject their thoughts without taking the time to think them through or decide if they are contributing anything. If it were possible to limit the number of times a person could post, maybe people would spend their posts more wisely. Whether the limit is one post per thread, 5 posts per month, or 20 posts per year, maybe it would encourage people to start another thread in the appropriate forum rather than hijacking the original thread. My thought has always been that the Incidents Forum was a place to READ, unless you had specific information about the incident, or something to contribute that was well thought out, to the point, and that simply could not be posted anywhere else on Dropzone.com. I think of it like testifying at a trial, where you shouldn't be called as a witness unless you actually have something to say. Or like speaking at a funeral, where your words and thoughts should have the gravity that the situation calls for. My intent is not to diminish the forum, but to focus it. Submitted respectfully and politely, with no intended insult to anyone.
  6. Here is one of the three pieces of advice that I give to every student when I sign off on their A-license: Make every decision in this sport based on the primary goal of "I want to be able to continue to skydive for many years."
  7. To address your initial concern, most everyone knows Paul. If he told you he will do something, you can bank on it. He may be travelling or not chained to the internet for some reason right now, but he is well respected and trustworthy. Try another call or email and give it a few more days. As an aside, pin protection through careful movement in a small cockpit is always a good idea.
  8. I've always been okay with the plastic cases because until now I believed the oft-repeated story that L&B would replace or repair their products if they were broken, even under exceptional circumstances. Their policies may have changed from people abusing the system, but the price/quality/support equation is less in balance now than it was before.
  9. My recent experience with returning a Pro-Track to L&B: The device started going through a set of batteries within a couple of days, sometimes less. I went to the website, noted their repair and return policies, then emailed them as their site requested. I have never received a response. As I am a working skydiver who uses his audible all the time, I went ahead and followed their instructions to ship it in a padded mailer, registered mail. That cost $25 USD. Without emailing or contacting me, they promptly shipped the broken Pro-Track back to me with a photocopy that says "Old model Pro-Dytter, Pro-Tracks that are more than two years old, first generation Solo, Optima, and Viso will no longer be repaired/replaced/upgraded." Note that their site does not mention that Pro-tracks are not eligible for service after 2 years: First Generation SOLO, OPTIMA and VISO as well as Pro-Dytter are now EOPL (End of Product Life) as replacement parts for these units are no longer available. Broken and/or defective SOLO II, OPTIMA II, VISO II, QUATTRO, ARES and VISO II+ will be repaired and/or replaced with the same model as long as the part(s) is/are available. The site has one policy for repair and replacement in the "Repair" section (LARSEN & BRUSGAARD has stopped servicing the old model "DYTTER" and "Pro-Dytter".), another in their "Happenings" sections (quoted above), and a third that they mailed to me. Your mileage may vary. It appears that if you have one of the newer products, AS LONG AS IT IS NOT THE VERY EXPENSIVE PRO-TRACK they are still offering their very good replacement service. Older products have been understandably deemed beyond "End of Life". Besides my old Pro-Dytter, I have bought three Pro-Tracks new over the past 8 years. One my wife still uses, one that was lost when it fell out of the pocket on a Z-1, and this one that I sent back for service. I don't mind paying to have the unit fixed, even though it rides around in comfort in a padded helmet and I can't think what would have caused it to break. But knowing that they will only support Pro-Tracks for 2 years will keep me from replacing this $325 audible with another L&B product. And I perceive the lack of email responses or even a note besides the photocopy of the "repair policy" as rudeness or lack of willingness to interact with the customer. Either way, not a positive experience.
  10. Have the updated models reached the market?
  11. My wife and I are traveling AFF instructors. We have an opportunity to help crew a sailboat from Norfolk to Savannah and are looking for a place to park our car or store our Skydiving and climbing gear for 10 days, starting this Friday, Oct 26. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Stephen 270 792 37ten Gravitycoaches AT gmail DOT com
  12. In my opinion, WTS would be far and away your best choice in this area of the country for what you are proposing. I was visiting a couple of years ago when a kid from Spain was there burning through AFF and his A License jumps before returning home. The large number of instructors and the quality of the facilities, coupled with the quick ride to altitude allow the student to progress as quickly as he or she is capable of. And as someone mentioned, the free coach jumps through the A license are a real benefit. But why do you want to wait until April? Plenty of winter jumping as well!
  13. I ended up buying the Outdoor edition and a "Chesty". I like the look and feel of the chest mount. I would have gone with the Motorsports Edition but Best Buy only stocks the Outdoor and I needed something to put under the tree. Still, after buying the camera and an SD card (NOT from Best Buy), along with a low profile mount, you end up with $400 in it. Since I can get a CX150 for $400, a Bonehead box to fit the camera and her All Sport for $200, a wide angle lens and Hypeye for another $200, I think I will give her the option to take the GoPro back and spend the additional $400 to have a more traditional camera helmet setup. Damned GoPro still just looks like a huge snag hazard to me.
  14. What kind of mount was she using? I assumed we would mount it with nylon hardware so that the hardware would break off there were a snag. I've also seen someone with a visor mount that allowed the visor to be raised. Nonetheless, good information! Thanks!