@@daandemeyer1708 to be honest, I don't know what the hell I was thinking about the day I replied to this. Although a little more breathing and slowing everything down would have been much more comfortable, everything looked fine. I do find it a bit funny that the breathing sounds like he just escaped Michael Myers on Halloween night. Lol.
@@canatolakhoemini6728 I was just desperately trying to say I want to basejump 😅. But because of family reasons I will stick to skydiving. I’ll just watchf youtube video’s of basejumpers.
@@daandemeyer1708 ahhh come on over to twin falls Idaho, call Miles D up , take the course and make one! If you want a safe controlled environment, that's the safest it gets. I've seen 16 years old girls make jumps off there with no skydives before. Not through Miles course! But it's pretty safe. I bet you would be on your deathbed in many years to come thinking, "man that dude on TH-cam totally made my dreams come true by suggesting I go to Idaho!" Lol.
I just have one question, I can see his main malfunction, looked like a clean cut away, and he pulled his reserve. I started skydiving, loved it. But I noticed on deploy of the reserve he had lines twisted but on a main I was told to do exactly what he did kicking in the correct direction to untwist the lines. Which he did and he got his canapy flying fine. So, is it a malfunction when you have a line twist on the reserve because of the loss of altitude so quickly. I could tell he was probably not going to have a problem as soon as he got his lines straight. So, did the altitude change make the line twist on a reserve a malfunction?
What cause the line twists on the reserve was I was still spinning when I cut away from the main. I thought I had stabilized myself but I still had some spin. The line twists on the main where caused but a toggle fire and the twists locked in the risers unevenly. The reserve is designed to be a much more docile canopy and easier to death with such problems.
In this case it appears the left toggle fired. This can sometimes open fine, sometimes line twist. There are so many variables at play it's often difficult to say what exactly caused it.
Yeah I was having a lot of toggles fires on that old container, I eventually replaced it. Toggle fires usually are not a big deal, until you mix it with a line twist.
The reserve thankfully is far more docile then the main. Keep in mind the main is designed for performance and convenience the reserve is designed to work. Every difference between the main and reserve from the shape to number of cells to the deployment method is a trade off for reliability.
Variety of factors packing body position and just dumb luck. This one doesn't appear to have had anything noticeable gone wrong. I year or two ago I bought a new container\harness and the number of malfunctions significantly decreased.
I get my fair share of line twists, this one was a little different through this was a line twist with a fired toggle changes of kicking out of that are slim when one side of the canopy is flying faster then the other. If you are a student and saw this and your reaction was to try to fix it your instructors are doing you a grave disservice. Kicking out of line twists is one thing under a stable canopy kicking out of line twists with a canopy while it's in a dive is a completely difference situation.
You were also flying a huge student canopy on your static line jump which 9 times out of 10 will remain straight & level even with line twists. Smaller canopies can go into a dive/spinning dive with line twists.
No the reserve line twist was not a result of a line twist it was because I was in a spin when I chopped. If you are spinning when you chop you'll continue to spin if you do not take time to correct it.
In this case it appears it was caused by one of the break toggle coming undone while it was opening. The parachute is designed so that when it opens it flying at half breaks. This gives you more time to turn if you open to close top someone and are heading at each other. The parachute also flies more stably in half breaks. In this case when it opened one of the break lines came loose so it was turning at half it's potential turn rate.
im starting my AFF course and this is my biggest fear! but reading comments it sounds common and some making out not a big deal which in a way is a bit reassuring and taught correctly you can get yourself out of the situation safely. but statistically how many dont and how many fatalities are there? im hoping its very low
Skydiving Fatalities are extremely low compared to the numbers of jumps. Average about 15 fatalities per year over 3 million jumps. And of those fatalities the vast majority are due to pilot error on high performance canopies. While gear failure does happen it's extremely rare and happens mostly due to user error, thus it is preventable if proper gear checks are made. As you will learn in your AFF course there is a monthly publication called the parachutist published by the USPA, and every fatality is investigated and reported in that publication so skydivers can learn from the unfortunate mistake of others. Line twists are a common malfunction, but the main and the reserve canopies are designed completely differently. The main is not considered a life saving device, and has many features to increase performance and convenience. The reserve is not designed for performance or convenience, it's designed to be as reliable as possible. In this video the two malfunctions are nearly identical, but there is a noticeable difference of how the malfunction affected the two canopies, where the main quickly entered into a spiraling dive that made fixing it questionable, the reserve flew strait and true. You'll start off with a student canopy that leans more towards to reliability side then the performance side. Probably a PD Navigator, and the difference between the a student canopy and a sport canopy is like driving a VW Minibus vs a Porche 911. The minibus is very docile and forgiving, the 911 is dynamic. Hope that helps and Blue Skies ~Derek
@@isk8nycOh seems i left out a word my bad haha. i wouldn't be able to keep a cool head in that situation, id think i was "done" at that point the second chute deployed and was also tangled up. Its amazing how you quickly assessed the situation and solved the Problem! I envy that. :D
Yes it is, even when it's flying straight it would still be considered a minor mal. This wasn't flying straight, one of my toggles had popped as well and that got locked into the twist, there was little chance of me fixing that one.
Such simple line twist can hardly be called malfunction. Btw. I dont use RSL or skyhook because it causes problems like this one. If I have altitude I will stabilize before deploying reserve.
I have 3 cutaways, first one - nasty rotation - line over, I cut main RSL deployed reserve and I had nasty line twist on reserve because I was in rotation while reserve was deploying - took me lot of time to solve it. I also know case where skyhook was cause of a death because of packer error related to skyhook so no thnx. I am fine with my skills. RSL is for beginners. If you know what you are doing RSL and skyhook are not needed.
With all due respect Linus, the only reason you should not use a RSL is if you have significant snag point on your helmet. RSL's are not just for beginners. Anyone without a without a snag point should use a RSL. Your argument makes as much sense as saying AAD's are for beginners.... Jumpers who boast about the number of cutaways they've had don't become old skydivers. In my opinion the fewer chops you have in your career the more proficient skydiver you are, not the other way around. This mal was caused by a toggle fire. I was flying with a team and not packing for myself so weather it was packed this way or fired on release in unclear, I do however give special attention to my toggles whenever I pack.
Derek, if a skydiver is unable to cutaway and pull reserve by himself or herself then they should play chess. I had 3 reserves - 0 was my fault. 1. Reserve - 7 th jump, bad pack job by other skydiver - line over 2. Reserve - 106 jump, brake line snapped, 3. Reserve - 476 jump, Vortex 2 issue with short risers - brake was unstowing on openings (line twist - entered spin - cutaway) - not always. Tested on the ground and solved by rigger. Give me one good reason for RSL or skyhook please.
While I agree with you that every skydiver should be able to pull for themselves having something there to do it for you won't hurt, aside from the issue of high risk of snag. I have to point out you think none of these cut aways were your fault. 1. Line overs are most often caused by steps throughs but you were a student and shouldn't be expect to be checking for this. 2. Break line snapped yes these thing do happen but lines usually give you some indication they are about to go. Checking gear thoroughly could have prevented this. 3. A high speed canopy that was continuously having break line fires, when you noticed the pattern you could have stopped jumping and looked at the problem with a rigger. From you wording didn't seam you addressed the issue until after the chop. This is the ego issue I was saying is common, "I've had less then 500 hundred jumps and had three chops, but none of them are my fault...." Piece of advice, whenever you hear youself say "it wasn't my fault" or "nothing I could have done" check your ego and ask someone, chances are there are things you could have done. I have seen an instance where a loose pebble, dirt grime ext became lodged in the housing and jammed the reserve handle when it was pulled for a repack. As the RSL pulls from the opposite end it would have helped. If for any reason you have trouble with your reserve. It's an off chance but there is also the possibility of your main KATOing at 1000 ft you'll have a better chance of survival chopping at that alt with a rsl then without. If you chop and your reserve doesn't have a kink from the rsl you're doing it wrong. You can't beat an rsl. As far as the skyhook goes, the skyhook will have you under a new canopy in 75 feet, a drastic reduction from the 300 ft with a rsl. There are three good reasons for a rsl or skyhook, you only asked for one. I don't see any difference between saying every jumper should be able to pull for themselves so you don't need an AAD and I don't see any difference between saying every jumper should be able to pull for themselves so you don't need an RSL. Oh and for the record I don't use a RSL because I have a decent risk of snag.
Yeah this rig used to toggle fire so regularly and my openings where so inconsistent I started to fear my great a bit. I replaced the container with one sized for me and I problems were dramatically reduced. I still get end cell closures now and then though.
It falls to earth a lot slower with little weight attached to it. But it wasn't falling slow with me attached the line twists and spiraling down. When I cut away I was probably moving at >70 MPH.
Guardian Observer Malfunctions tend to be caused by whoever packed the parachute. Equipment failure is rare. Even when equipment is at fault there were usually warning signs of wear which could be found during the packing process.
Bummer, thought something scary was going to happen other than the normal Stiletto X. Good times! Acting like he had a real malfunction or something! Lol.
@@oldguitarguy7528 It's like trying to explain to a four year old why kissing girls is fun. You can't really understand it until you try it. The first time is a life event there was life before and after that happened. More then anything else it's a sense of freedom like no other it's extreme intensity followed by such peace. It's the hyper focus you get while in free fall, it's something that wipes all your cares away, it's a palette cleanser for life.
@@isk8nyc k, i get that from playing music and dont have to worry about smashing into the earth at 225 mph. Sorry, will never understand, i hate the 12 hr flight from here to israel more than anything in the world. Flying is must do situation.
@@oldguitarguy7528 A skydive is about a < 30 mins abt 20 mins to alti 60 seconds or so of freefall, 5 mins of canopy flight, that's the other half most people who don't jump don't really get after you have a parachute over your head, you are no longer a skydiver, but a glider pilot.
The deep breaths after adrenaline are all super the same. Gotta love it
This ^
I was holding my breath just watching this.
@Apostolos Ginnakidis what the fuck are you talking about
Same.
Great job. Thank you for sharing this with us.
@Apostolos Ginnakidis si
Glad to hear that you are doing well
Wow no panic...thanks for sharing 👍🏻
You panic a little after you get on the ground, but in the moment you are far to hyper focused to experience panic.
I get that line twists on a reserve a technically a malfunction, but ive had them on every one of my reserve rides because im always spinning 😭
Seems like dude has never made a base jump and doesn't trust his gear or his rigger at all! Didn't seem scary at all. Concerning maybe a tiny bit.
@@canatolakhoemini6728 most people never did a basejump... it’s a wet dream for most.
@@daandemeyer1708 to be honest, I don't know what the hell I was thinking about the day I replied to this. Although a little more breathing and slowing everything down would have been much more comfortable, everything looked fine. I do find it a bit funny that the breathing sounds like he just escaped Michael Myers on Halloween night. Lol.
@@canatolakhoemini6728 I was just desperately trying to say I want to basejump 😅. But because of family reasons I will stick to skydiving. I’ll just watchf youtube video’s of basejumpers.
@@daandemeyer1708 ahhh come on over to twin falls Idaho, call Miles D up , take the course and make one! If you want a safe controlled environment, that's the safest it gets. I've seen 16 years old girls make jumps off there with no skydives before. Not through Miles course! But it's pretty safe. I bet you would be on your deathbed in many years to come thinking, "man that dude on TH-cam totally made my dreams come true by suggesting I go to Idaho!" Lol.
Is this sky's the limit by any chance? Brings back memories!
Yes it is.
This is the first guy I’ve seen get the twisted parachute untwisted, must be a pro
You should watch more skydiving videos, line twists are a common malfunction.
@@isk8nyc I’ve watched maybe like 20 and most either land with it twisted or cut
I am a 50 jump SUPER ROOKIE and I've kicked out of line twists 3 or 4 times.
I just have one question, I can see his main malfunction, looked like a clean cut away, and he pulled his reserve. I started skydiving, loved it. But I noticed on deploy of the reserve he had lines twisted but on a main I was told to do exactly what he did kicking in the correct direction to untwist the lines. Which he did and he got his canapy flying fine. So, is it a malfunction when you have a line twist on the reserve because of the loss of altitude so quickly. I could tell he was probably not going to have a problem as soon as he got his lines straight. So, did the altitude change make the line twist on a reserve a malfunction?
What cause the line twists on the reserve was I was still spinning when I cut away from the main. I thought I had stabilized myself but I still had some spin. The line twists on the main where caused but a toggle fire and the twists locked in the risers unevenly. The reserve is designed to be a much more docile canopy and easier to death with such problems.
You cant spend the rest of your life trying to get stable, wisdom from my instructors.
@@alphonzo5812 I would also add if you canopy doesn't work you have the rest of your life to fix it.
Thank you 😘😘😘😘😘😘
Good job and what an amazing canopy, comes back to daddy on it´s own. :D
You know it!
what percentage of Mains are just lost after a cutaway? This one looks like it's happily coming right back to the airfield
@@RiverGibbs at most dzs people will drive towards the cut canopy after they notice it. pretty common to recover it
That's one reason why law speed mals kill more people. You got time enough to make bad decisions, and you have time to worry about your lost shit.
Damn good work on that second.
Fortunately the reserve is designed to be as safe as possible, it's a lot less fun to fly a lot less maneuverable but it works.
Glad you’re ok good job
Good job! You cutaway high enough to deal with the Reserve
Thanks flying with camera wings and what not having extra alti is always a good thing
Wow, crazy stuff
Have you ever had anything similar with paramotoring?
Nope, and hope I never do.
wht cause the lines twist of the main?.. in the opening its look clear?!
In this case it appears the left toggle fired. This can sometimes open fine, sometimes line twist. There are so many variables at play it's often difficult to say what exactly caused it.
Derek, take care about toggle housing 1:15 ;) and it looks, that reserve was closed quite tight ;p
Yeah I was having a lot of toggles fires on that old container, I eventually replaced it. Toggle fires usually are not a big deal, until you mix it with a line twist.
Just got my A License. I'm scared to death of having a cut-away...and then my reserve has a line twist also.
The reserve thankfully is far more docile then the main. Keep in mind the main is designed for performance and convenience the reserve is designed to work. Every difference between the main and reserve from the shape to number of cells to the deployment method is a trade off for reliability.
Now i see why base jumps are so deadly...i just need a second to recover🤯
Yes BASE is much more dangerous, you only use one parachute with BASE but it's designed a lot more like the reserve.
Did this happen due to poor packing of the parachute or?
Variety of factors packing body position and just dumb luck. This one doesn't appear to have had anything noticeable gone wrong. I year or two ago I bought a new container\harness and the number of malfunctions significantly decreased.
@@isk8nyc thank you..
Line twists? Had them on my first static line jump last weekend. Apparently they're pretty common. I just kicked it out.
I get my fair share of line twists, this one was a little different through this was a line twist with a fired toggle changes of kicking out of that are slim when one side of the canopy is flying faster then the other. If you are a student and saw this and your reaction was to try to fix it your instructors are doing you a grave disservice. Kicking out of line twists is one thing under a stable canopy kicking out of line twists with a canopy while it's in a dive is a completely difference situation.
You were also flying a huge student canopy on your static line jump which 9 times out of 10 will remain straight & level even with line twists. Smaller canopies can go into a dive/spinning dive with line twists.
That reserve line twist occurred due to poor body position upon deploying said reserve. Seems I see that more than not. Pretty sad.
No the reserve line twist was not a result of a line twist it was because I was in a spin when I chopped. If you are spinning when you chop you'll continue to spin if you do not take time to correct it.
Thats not his audible alti beeping, that's his fitbit
No that's my audible alti. It's setup for four way camera.
What may be the reason for this
In this case it appears it was caused by one of the break toggle coming undone while it was opening. The parachute is designed so that when it opens it flying at half breaks. This gives you more time to turn if you open to close top someone and are heading at each other. The parachute also flies more stably in half breaks. In this case when it opened one of the break lines came loose so it was turning at half it's potential turn rate.
im starting my AFF course and this is my biggest fear! but reading comments it sounds common and some making out not a big deal which in a way is a bit reassuring and taught correctly you can get yourself out of the situation safely. but statistically how many dont and how many fatalities are there? im hoping its very low
Skydiving Fatalities are extremely low compared to the numbers of jumps.
Average about 15 fatalities per year over 3 million jumps. And of those fatalities the vast majority are due to pilot error on high performance canopies. While gear failure does happen it's extremely rare and happens mostly due to user error, thus it is preventable if proper gear checks are made.
As you will learn in your AFF course there is a monthly publication called the parachutist published by the USPA, and every fatality is investigated and reported in that publication so skydivers can learn from the unfortunate mistake of others.
Line twists are a common malfunction, but the main and the reserve canopies are designed completely differently. The main is not considered a life saving device, and has many features to increase performance and convenience. The reserve is not designed for performance or convenience, it's designed to be as reliable as possible. In this video the two malfunctions are nearly identical, but there is a noticeable difference of how the malfunction affected the two canopies, where the main quickly entered into a spiraling dive that made fixing it questionable, the reserve flew strait and true. You'll start off with a student canopy that leans more towards to reliability side then the performance side. Probably a PD Navigator, and the difference between the a student canopy and a sport canopy is like driving a VW Minibus vs a Porche 911. The minibus is very docile and forgiving, the 911 is dynamic.
Hope that helps and Blue Skies
~Derek
jesuus , id think i was at that point
What was the point?
@@isk8nycOh seems i left out a word my bad haha.
i wouldn't be able to keep a cool head in that situation,
id think i was "done" at that point the second chute deployed and was also tangled up. Its amazing how you quickly assessed the situation and solved the Problem! I envy that. :D
A line twist is not a malfunction.
Doch!
Yes it is, even when it's flying straight it would still be considered a minor mal. This wasn't flying straight, one of my toggles had popped as well and that got locked into the twist, there was little chance of me fixing that one.
Depends on altitude, higher then decision one it's not, when you still have linetwist on decision alti - it's high time for reserve ;)
My ears are alright :D
Planes and freefall out loud ;')
Such simple line twist can hardly be called malfunction. Btw. I dont use RSL or skyhook because it causes problems like this one.
If I have altitude I will stabilize before deploying reserve.
" I dont use RSL or skyhook because it causes problems as this one" one of the great myths of skydiving
I have 3 cutaways, first one - nasty rotation - line over, I cut main RSL deployed reserve and I had nasty line twist on reserve because I was in rotation while reserve was deploying - took me lot of time to solve it.
I also know case where skyhook was cause of a death because of packer error related to skyhook so no thnx. I am fine with my skills. RSL is for beginners. If you know what you are doing RSL and skyhook are not needed.
With all due respect Linus, the only reason you should not use a RSL is if you have significant snag point on your helmet. RSL's are not just for beginners. Anyone without a without a snag point should use a RSL. Your argument makes as much sense as saying AAD's are for beginners....
Jumpers who boast about the number of cutaways they've had don't become old skydivers. In my opinion the fewer chops you have in your career the more proficient skydiver you are, not the other way around. This mal was caused by a toggle fire. I was flying with a team and not packing for myself so weather it was packed this way or fired on release in unclear, I do however give special attention to my toggles whenever I pack.
Derek, if a skydiver is unable to cutaway and pull reserve by himself or herself then they should play chess.
I had 3 reserves - 0 was my fault.
1. Reserve - 7 th jump, bad pack job by other skydiver - line over
2. Reserve - 106 jump, brake line snapped,
3. Reserve - 476 jump, Vortex 2 issue with short risers - brake was unstowing on openings (line twist - entered spin - cutaway) - not always. Tested on the ground and solved by rigger.
Give me one good reason for RSL or skyhook please.
While I agree with you that every skydiver should be able to pull for themselves having something there to do it for you won't hurt, aside from the issue of high risk of snag.
I have to point out you think none of these cut aways were your fault.
1. Line overs are most often caused by steps throughs but you were a student and shouldn't be expect to be checking for this.
2. Break line snapped yes these thing do happen but lines usually give you some indication they are about to go. Checking gear thoroughly could have prevented this.
3. A high speed canopy that was continuously having break line fires, when you noticed the pattern you could have stopped jumping and looked at the problem with a rigger. From you wording didn't seam you addressed the issue until after the chop.
This is the ego issue I was saying is common, "I've had less then 500 hundred jumps and had three chops, but none of them are my fault...." Piece of advice, whenever you hear youself say "it wasn't my fault" or "nothing I could have done" check your ego and ask someone, chances are there are things you could have done.
I have seen an instance where a loose pebble, dirt grime ext became lodged in the housing and jammed the reserve handle when it was pulled for a repack. As the RSL pulls from the opposite end it would have helped. If for any reason you have trouble with your reserve.
It's an off chance but there is also the possibility of your main KATOing at 1000 ft you'll have a better chance of survival chopping at that alt with a rsl then without. If you chop and your reserve doesn't have a kink from the rsl you're doing it wrong. You can't beat an rsl.
As far as the skyhook goes, the skyhook will have you under a new canopy in 75 feet, a drastic reduction from the 300 ft with a rsl.
There are three good reasons for a rsl or skyhook, you only asked for one.
I don't see any difference between saying every jumper should be able to pull for themselves so you don't need an AAD and I don't see any difference between saying every jumper should be able to pull for themselves so you don't need an RSL.
Oh and for the record I don't use a RSL because I have a decent risk of snag.
why did your reserve deploy and line twist on you?? was it body position on deploment? double line twist wtf?
I was in a spin when it was deployed
Мы не стрептезёры не шахматисты мы парашютисты
Да, мы - Голубое небо
Gotta love toggle fire
Yeah this rig used to toggle fire so regularly and my openings where so inconsistent I started to fear my great a bit. I replaced the container with one sized for me and I problems were dramatically reduced. I still get end cell closures now and then though.
waw ikut tegang nontonnya ngeri sendiri lihat😲
Pretty scary indeed…
th-cam.com/video/klGi_WZ17U0/w-d-xo.html ,.,
I just sh!t my pants
Hope the clean up was quick and easy.
@@isk8nyc hahahahahahaha
Show have stayed with the first it took ages to fall to the ground.
Wym?
It falls to earth a lot slower with little weight attached to it. But it wasn't falling slow with me attached the line twists and spiraling down. When I cut away I was probably moving at >70 MPH.
Did you find your main?
Yeah it actually came down abt 200 ft from where I landed.
Should’ve straightened the first chute
I don’t follow what you mean
@@isk8nyc I would’ve spent a bit more time pulling the main risers apart like he did with the spare
Those parachute manufacturers must definitely find a solution to all these parachute malfunctions we see all over the net!!
Guardian Observer Malfunctions tend to be caused by whoever packed the parachute. Equipment failure is rare. Even when equipment is at fault there were usually warning signs of wear which could be found during the packing process.
That is why there are two. The reserve did not malfunction. It opened with simple line twist that is easily corrected
Still technically a malfunction. But the reserves are designed to be far more docile.
Woohoo STL!
Keep kicking, it's just twists.
+ toggle fire on the first one
شانس اوردی چتر کمکی هم لاین تویس شد
The translation of this is hilarious...
"Luckily, the auxiliary umbrella also became a line"
What dz is this?
This happened at Sky's the Limit in PA.
Sợ vãi
I was to after I got back on the ground...
그리스도는 참된 제사장이 되셔서 저주와 재앙에서 해방되는 길을 열어 주셨습니다. 누구든지 예수를 믿고 영접하면 법적으로 죄와 사망에서 영원히 해방되며 하나님의 자녀가 됩니다. 예수를 믿고 영접하세요. 예수는 그대를 사랑하고 있습니다.
I respect your beliefs.
😐😐😐😐
Bummer, thought something scary was going to happen other than the normal Stiletto X. Good times! Acting like he had a real malfunction or something! Lol.
Line twist + toogle fire isn't something you can fix on this canopy.
Volvio a nacer
Uma hora isso da merda
Thanks for the feedback.
Load
Load?
Play stupid games win stipid prizes
Seriously?
@@isk8nyc yes, he jumoed out of an airplane that was flaying perfectly. For WHAT?
@@oldguitarguy7528 It's like trying to explain to a four year old why kissing girls is fun. You can't really understand it until you try it. The first time is a life event there was life before and after that happened. More then anything else it's a sense of freedom like no other it's extreme intensity followed by such peace. It's the hyper focus you get while in free fall, it's something that wipes all your cares away, it's a palette cleanser for life.
@@isk8nyc k, i get that from playing music and dont have to worry about smashing into the earth at 225 mph. Sorry, will never understand, i hate the 12 hr flight from here to israel more than anything in the world. Flying is must do situation.
@@oldguitarguy7528 A skydive is about a < 30 mins abt 20 mins to alti 60 seconds or so of freefall, 5 mins of canopy flight, that's the other half most people who don't jump don't really get after you have a parachute over your head, you are no longer a skydiver, but a glider pilot.