I've had similar experiences. I tend to agree with Bryan that the prime cause of PC hesitation is stowing. I've noticed that I get a PC hesitation rate of around 1 in 10 doing "stow and go" deployments (i.e. a stowed deployment with zero delay). I had a conversation with a BASE gear manufacturer after one of these experiences off a 300' cliff in Moab, and he described it as "random stowed hesitation." Basically, he meant that sometimes stowed PC's just hesitate.
My advice: if you can't afford to have a PC hesitation, go hand held.
I would like to see (or do) some research on hesitation. I have ruled out the "bridle-over" malfunction by video evidence on more than half of these stowed hesitations. I'm sure that it can happen (I've seen the video), but I don't think it is the primary culprit. I just have too many videos of my PC at full bridle extension, with the mesh fully extended, flapping away (not inflating). When I examine it frame by frame, it looks like it should be inflating (airflow straight up into the mesh, bridle and mesh fully extended) but it just isn't.
The only cause I have been able to identify (by statistical inference) is the length of time the PC remains packed and stowed prior to the jump. I have a far higher rate of hesitation on a PC that was stowed at least 12 hours prior to the jump than on PC's stowed at the exit point. Call me superstitious, but I've taken to stowing my PC as close to the exit as possible for the way low (300' or less--yes, I know that's too low to go stowed) stowed jumps.
Anyone else have any possible causes?
--Tom Aiello
tbaiello@ucdavis.edu
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