Yuri
November 18th, 1999, 10:49 AM
Yo!
I have mentioned this subject before but would really like to hear comments from other jumpers and manufacturers:
I have started rolling the nose on terminal jumps to slow down the openings. Results were much better (more consistent) than using a sail slider instead of mesh. Surprisingly, this has also affected on-heading perfomance - to the better! Without rolling the nose, i would get 180 every 5..10 jumps and 90 off every other jump (my pack job is a rather quick propack over the shoulder http://www.baselogic.com/forum/images/wink.gif
Since i have started rolling, it has been a while that i can even remember a 180: out of 30 terminal jumps in Norway the worst one was a 90 off - almost all were dead-on (and 28 of them were wingsuit jumps!). This is such an improvement that i have moved on to rolling the nose on most slider-up subterminal jumps as well. While 2..3 rolls slow the opening a bit, it is a good trade-off for a straight (and seemingly more staged) deployment.
The pack job: it's a quick propack over the shoulder with the nose exposed, stabilizers rolled and the tail wrapped around everything else. Once i lay it down, i roll the nose (3 outside cells on each side): 5..6 rolls for terminal jumps and 2..3 for subterminal. Center cell stays wide open and pulls over the entire pack job once i put it in the container (Adam's way). I use a regular mesh slider, both direct and indirect slider control for terminal jumps and just a locking stow for subterminal. I also rubberband my steering lines to the slider - mostly to facilitate quick packing http://www.baselogic.com/forum/images/wink.gif
My theory here is that a center cell acts like an "anchor", while rolled outer cells take their time to inflate, effectively reducing canopy aspect ratio on opening. This is how it looks on video, anyway.
bsbd!
Yuri.
I have mentioned this subject before but would really like to hear comments from other jumpers and manufacturers:
I have started rolling the nose on terminal jumps to slow down the openings. Results were much better (more consistent) than using a sail slider instead of mesh. Surprisingly, this has also affected on-heading perfomance - to the better! Without rolling the nose, i would get 180 every 5..10 jumps and 90 off every other jump (my pack job is a rather quick propack over the shoulder http://www.baselogic.com/forum/images/wink.gif
Since i have started rolling, it has been a while that i can even remember a 180: out of 30 terminal jumps in Norway the worst one was a 90 off - almost all were dead-on (and 28 of them were wingsuit jumps!). This is such an improvement that i have moved on to rolling the nose on most slider-up subterminal jumps as well. While 2..3 rolls slow the opening a bit, it is a good trade-off for a straight (and seemingly more staged) deployment.
The pack job: it's a quick propack over the shoulder with the nose exposed, stabilizers rolled and the tail wrapped around everything else. Once i lay it down, i roll the nose (3 outside cells on each side): 5..6 rolls for terminal jumps and 2..3 for subterminal. Center cell stays wide open and pulls over the entire pack job once i put it in the container (Adam's way). I use a regular mesh slider, both direct and indirect slider control for terminal jumps and just a locking stow for subterminal. I also rubberband my steering lines to the slider - mostly to facilitate quick packing http://www.baselogic.com/forum/images/wink.gif
My theory here is that a center cell acts like an "anchor", while rolled outer cells take their time to inflate, effectively reducing canopy aspect ratio on opening. This is how it looks on video, anyway.
bsbd!
Yuri.