sqwkvfr said:
Do you know these guys, FN?
Say, did you ever get your jump in? I remember that you were sitting out a few weekends back because of the weather.
No, I never met Andre, not that I remember. In fact, today when my co-workers were discussing this incident, it was the first time I had ever heard of these guys.
As an ex-plane owner, I feel for the guy. That's a lot of nice plane to lose in an accident and it takes so much work to get something like that going...hopefully his insurance company can get him up and going again quickly.
Although I don't wish this on any jump pilot, based on the age, I'm hopping it's not my buddy Monty. He's a good stick, a corporate pilot and a hell of a guy...and he's about that age. My co-workers couldn't figure out how a jump plane could catch up with the jumpers, but they are just not up on what goes on in skydiving operations.
We do a lot of tandems at our drop zone and even with a 182, I have to watch very carefully that I don't catch up with them in the pattern...especially when doing a mid-field overfly to join the mid-field down wind. We use a pretty well thought out engine cooling process and even then, I can overtake tandems because they open so high. Plus, we usually only give them 9,000 AGL.
As as far as getting the first one of the season...I been meaning to get out and make that one, but the opportunity has eluded me. I have a warm fuzzy feeling that Sunday is going to be the big day. Since I have been a real slacker the last summer...it's going to really feel a lot like a first. I'm sure I'll have sweaty palms on the drive to the DZ.
I'll probably spend some time in our cut away simulator...yea, a simulator! You put this old rig on and they have you walk up a portable gantry. They hook you up to some rigging that is secured pretty good to a beam in the high point in the hanger.
Then he has you go through a normal wave off and deploy sequence, then you get the malfunction de jour...which normally means a cut away. You pull the cut away pad and off you go, swinging across the hanger and somebody usually spins you as you go by. Pretty disorienting when you are trying to find the silver reserve handle.
It sounds kind of silly, but it's a real confidence builder...about the same as when someone cuts an engine in an Aztec and you have dig out the old muscle memory and do the identify, fix or feather thing.
Just like that process, you take your time, look at the pad and peel velcro...extend full length until you see the lose ends. Then you look for the silver handle...pull and extend full length and a spring loaded pilot chute pops out! Maybe you do it a second time and check ride's over...now get your ass geared up...five minute call!
