I have been having a discussion with a friend on brake settings and deployment stalls. I have a hypothetical situation (ok, it's not really that hypothetical), and I wonder if anyone has any thoughts on they physics involved. Here goes:
A 200 pound jumper is using an Blackjack 280. The brakes are set perfectly to give him minimal forward speed on deployment.
In an effort to get chicks, he loses 15 pounds. Now, at 185 pounds, he finds that his formerly perfect brake settings are:
a) still perfect
b) too deep--his canopy stalls on deployment
c) too shallow--he has lots of forward speed on opening
d) there is some other effect
Obviously the PAC valves are going to add a bit of complexity. So, if you know the correct answer without the secondary inlets (i.e if the canopy was an Ace), please help me out with that.
I thought I knew the answer to this, but a review of wing aerodynamics is appearing to conflict with my personal experience.
Can someone help me?
Thanks,
--Tom Aiello
tbaiello@ucdavis.edu
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