Video shows moment skydiver cuts himself free from tangled parachute
Australia's transport safety investigator has released video footage of a skydiver cutting himself free from his parachute after it became snagged on a plane wing in mid-air.
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Okay, I was a skydiver for 12 years, the entire decade of the 80's and a couple more. I got a USPA (united states parachute association) 'D' (expert) license along the way. In this video, the guy is a Front Floater. The jumper in the door facing the airplane is the middle floater, the guy outside the skin aft is the rear floater. Somehow the front floaters reserve parachute ripcord got pulled. I figure someone trying to get grips on the door seal for leverage when exiting. Since it was his reserve, he cannot use anything but his Zack knife to separate himself from the canopy. The main canopy has a single point cutaway system, called a three ring, that will separate a malfunctioning main from the container. This is to prevent the reserve canopy from getting tangled up with the main canopy flopping around over his head. In the this case, he has to lose the reserve canopy to prevent an entanglement and the only way is to cut the lines from the risers. A pretty damn expensive incident. truth be told. Once he cuts the lines, which are probably kevlar, he gets stable and pulls his pilot chute and opens his main canopy and what's left of the reserve gets in the way so he has a bad landing. Typically under a square the landings are easy tippy toe. If I can confuse anyone more. please let me know.![]()
Video shows moment skydiver cuts himself free from tangled parachute
Australia's transport safety investigator has released video footage of a skydiver cutting himself free from his parachute after it became snagged on a plane wing in mid-air.www.abc.net.au
I have jumped in the past and loved doing it. The first time was wild though.I ain't jumping out of an airplane without a damned good reason.
Considering the alternative, I think the price was inconsequentialA pretty damn expensive incident. truth be told.
The report is that the handle of his reserve parachute snagged on a wing flap.Somehow the front floaters reserve parachute ripcord got pulled. I figure someone trying to get grips on the door seal for leverage when exiting.
Err...that comment was not from the journalist but from the actual Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) investigation - see below:Canopy was already deploying before he fully exited the door, and nowhere near the tail-plane or any form of "wing flap" (darned journalists !).
Dedicated jump aircraft, as Airframes stated, don't have anything to snag a skydivers gear. In fact, some DC-3 and Beech 18's often have extra grab handles riveted fore and aft of the door for the floaters to have something to hang onto. These handles are mounted around the top of the door frame for hands to grab, not gear. I'll stick with another jumper accidently pulling the ripcord.Err...that comment was not from the journalist but from the actual Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) investigation - see below:
Also, if you watch the video in slow motion it does not appear to have been deployed before he exited the door.
I have jumped in the past and loved doing it. The first time was wild though.
Kids, don't try this at home- We had several weekends with just crappy weather. On one of those weekends one of our 1000+ jumps people stated that our parachutes were designed to open fast and at high speeds, all true. He and a area safety guy got to talking, and decided that if the parachutes were packed for a fast opening, as in a BASE jump, and we exited at a speed of 140mph, a successful jump from 900' could be made. Ron, the 1000+ jumps guy, me and one other idiot decided to give it a go.Considering the alternative, I think the price was inconsequential
I was turned away from the military due to too many health issues. For some reason, bleeding disorders, dietary restrictions and two lazy eyes are incompatible with the military. I was told I'd never make it as a paratrooper because of my eyes, so I made 633 skydives to prove them 'right'.Nice one. Brings back memories of military jumping in the 1970s, and then skydiving later, in the mid 1980s and early 90s.
Wish I was fit enough to still do it, but disability won't allow !
Congrats on the POPs! That is awesome. Did you get the SCR and SCS? Those were cool patches. And Jame Bonding off a mountain, that's crazy- something I'd love to have done, even though I never cottoned to BASE jumping, that scared me. Give me 13500 over a bridge or building anyday.I got my POPs patch a couple of years before leaving the display team I used to manage, due to (young) family commitments. Last time I was under canopy was when I skied off a mountain side in the French alps, thirty years ago - great fun, but no freefall "rush".
Nowadays, I'd more than qualify for a POS patch - Parachutist over Seventy !
I'd thought of doing a tandem jump, but how do you get a two-seat bicycle into an Islander or Twin Otter ....................