ricardo.quail

Members
  • Content

    3
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Feedback

    0%

Everything posted by ricardo.quail

  1. Learning to inface and outface carve at different wind speeds will help to improve your tracking skills. Ultimately more tracking jumps will make the biggest difference.
  2. I recently acquired a Sabre 170 with 500 jumps. I'm still quite new to the sport with 58 jumps. I'm currently loading it at 1 lb per square ft. Overall I'm pleased with this canopy. It flies well, with firm responses to the steering toggles and a strong fly, which lifts me back up into the air if I flare to quickly when landing. As for the opening, I have yet to be slammed, but I have only put 10 jumps on it so far. Tends to open off heading, but not by much.I think it is a good and fun canopy for a beginner that is fairly forgiving of mistakes. Canopies I have flown so far: Manta 280 - Slow with brutal openings Navigator 220 - A fun and easy canopy. Raider 220 - Back breaking openings and sloppy feeling. Fury 220 - Similar to the raider. Spectre 170 - Slow opening, but fun to fly with quick turns (quicker than the sabre), but the wind penetration is not as good as the Sabre. PD 190 - Gets you down to earth and that's about it
  3. Time to get your FS1. Yes it is expensive, but definitely worth it. I learnt alot. You are only looking at a few hundred quid, which you have already ploughed into doing all of those solos. For the time the coaches gave me, I think they were worth every penny. Jumping with others is alot more fun and dynamic. The sport has lots of paths of progression: flat, freefly and canopy. I don't see how you can get bored when there is so much more to learn. Rik
  4. ricardo.quail

    Me