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Articles » Skydiving

  • Why You Should Get Into Parachute Sky Diving

    Even non-historians would know that parachute sky diving may have entered modern times because of military needs during the two world wars. At that time, it was a must for the countries at war to train parachutists. These days, even with the great wars behind us, parachutists apparently still abound. Many would wonder why in blue blazes anyone would want to risk life and limb for reasons that are not attached to self-survival or the country’s welfare.

  • Becoming a Sky Diving Instructor

    You’ve seen them in those cool suits attempting the impossible, jump right out of a plane without wings. All of a sudden you want to become a sky diving instructor. Okay so maybe the thousands of dollars you’ll earn in this risky career and the multitude of adoring fans in your hometown may also convince you to pursue your dreams of becoming a sky diving instructor. It is not however, as easy as the movies make it seem.

  • A Little (Simple) Skydiving Physics

    Skydiving looks both exciting and scary. But to make it more of one and less of the other is pretty simple. It will help to get a little bit of information about how such an amazing activity is even possible. It just takes an ultra simple physics lesson. No math required.

  • AFF – Accelerated Free Fall During Skydiving

    In days past, Static Line was the most common method of skydiving for beginners. As the skydiver exits the plane, an attached line deploys a pilot chute, which then opens the main canopy a few seconds later. Tandem skydiving grew later. Here, the novice is attached to a more experienced skydiver by a harness. The instructor is in control of chute deployment and every other aspect of the dive.

  • Skydiving - Airborne Adventure!

    Skydiving is often thought of as a major adrenaline producing sport. And, for good reason. It is.

  • Skydiving - Canopy Problems

    No skydiving lessons are needed to know that if your canopy has trouble, you have trouble. But that trouble comes in different forms and lessons can tell you what they are and how to deal with them.

  • Guidelines for Safety: Be Aware When You Skydive

    Every skydiver faces risks. Though they're often exaggerated, about 1 jump in 100,000 leads to a fatality every year. Compare that to the risk of being in a fatal car crash within 25 miles of home, which is about 1 in 6,000.

  • How To Deploy while Skydiving

    In broad outline, how a modern ram canopy parachute deploys is pretty much the same, barring emergencies. The skydiver extracts a pilot chute that fills with air and tugs on attached lines. Those lines are also attached to the main canopy that is pulled from the D-bag in the backpack. It in turn fills with air. Simple.

  • Instant Opening – Static and IAD during skydiving

    Tandem and AFF (accelerated free fall) skydiving methods get a lot of attention. They are, it's true, two very common ways of instructing students in the art of falling out of a plane with a parachute. But there's a traditional method that is still very frequently employed - Instant Opening.

  • Reserve Deployment

    No one wants to have to deploy their reserve chute. And, fortunately, it's rare to have to do so. But hang around a busy dropzone for a few days and you're almost certain to see at least one instance. Far from the dire emergency it may sound, reserve deployment is a normal part of skydiving, even though it's infrequent.

  • Skydiving Gear

    Skydiving looks so simple. You open the canopy, you drift down. What could be simpler? In fact, there is an amazing variety of gear used in even the most elementary jumps.

  • Skydiving Techniques

    Beyond the classic face down, belly-toward-Earth flying position, there are many skydiving techniques that it's great to know. The more you know, the more fun you can have for those few precious seconds during freefall.

  • Tandem Skydiving

    There are several ways to get initiated into the exciting activity of skydiving. One of the most common is something called a Tandem Jump.

  • Skydiving - The High Flying Sport

    Skydiving or parachuting brings to mind familiar images from films and TV commercials. Who hasn't seen one or a hundred people floating through the air, wind flapping against their jumpsuits, followed by a swoosh and a colorful canopy blooming?

  • The Parts of a Parachute

    A modern parachute is a complex piece of equipment - and lucky for the skydiver that it is, too. All that complexity is there to serve a purpose: to bring skydivers to Earth safely while providing a quality experience in the air.

  • Tracking and Gliding During Skydiving

    Tracking is a skydiving skill emphasized very early in training. It involves positioning the body to produce horizontal movement.

  • Turbulence, Not Your Friend During Skydiving

    There are two basic types of air flow, laminar and turbulent. Despite the fancy names, the ideas are very simple. Picture the smoke rising off the tip of a cigarette. Near the hot end the smoke flows smoothly upward. At a certain point, it starts curling and swirling. That's turbulent flow.

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