skydiving


"Skydiver" redirects here. For other uses, see Skydiver (disambiguation).
"Skydive" redirects here. For the fictional character, see Skydive (Transformers).

Skydiver about to land
Parachuting is an activity involving a preplanned drop from a height using a deployable parachute.

One type of parachuting is skydiving,
which is recreational parachuting, also called sport parachuting.

The history of parachuting is not clear.
It's known that Andre-Jacques Garnerin made successful parachute jumps from a hot-air balloon in 1797. The military developed parachuting technology first as a way to save aircrews from emergencies aboard balloons and aircraft in flight, later as a way of delivering soldiers to the battlefield. Early competitions date back to the 1930s, and it became an international sport in 1951.

Today
it is performed as a recreational activity and a competitive sport as well as for the deployment of military personnel Airborne forces and occasionally forest firefighters.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Learn to Skydive


If you’re looking for skydiving jump spots in California, look no further than Adventure Center Skydiving. The skydive school and premier jump location has national attention as one of the best skydiving capitals anywhere in North America.

Adventure Center Skydiving is situated at the Hollister Airport, which is due south of the garlic capital of the world, Gilroy, and east of Monterey Bay. This skydiving center provides the whole spectrum practically of equipment rentals and purchases , jump options from tandem to expert solo, and training. You can also request a full multimedia presentation, showcasing your first or your thousandth dive. It includes both still photo and full-on video services.

Unlike nearby San Francisco, the weather around this skydiving center is near perfect nearly all the time. Unlike San Francisco, there rarely is that chilly fog here. Just expect clear blue skies, calm winds, and the smiling sun on your face as you plummet from ten thousand feet.

Their skydive school and lessons program aren’t too shabby either. All of Adventure’s instructors have the USPA’s highest rating, which means they all have at least 1,000 jumps under their belt. Some even have up to 5,000 jumps in the resume. More importantly to you, the trainee, these instructors have also trained thousands of students just like you, and many have decades of teaching in their background.

Of course, Adventure isn’t the only jump center and skydive school in the San Francisco and northern California area. It may be the best, but here are some other centers that give it stiff competition for that number one ranking:
Adrenaline Air Skydiving of Santa Rosa is located 50 miles south of San Francisco. From your vantage in the heavens there, you will have unique and breathtaking views of the Pacific Ocean, San Francisco, and the Sierra Nevada Mountains.

SkyDance Skydiving Quality is only 20 miles away from Sacramento, but is well worth the visit no matter where you’re located in California. It’s specialty is the 30,000-foot skydives, and it’s other claim to fame is that it was home to the 1988 Olympic Skydiving Team.

Bay Area Skydiving is 60 miles to the east of San Francisco, so it’s central to the Bay Area, as well as the Central Valley. You can jump anyway you want here, including skysurfing and freeflying.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

How to Choose a Skydiving Training Method


After you calculate all your time and cash available for skydiving
you will be able to choose between three first jump skydiving methods. Static line, tandem and AFF (Accelerated Free Fall).

These methods are pretty different
because if a method will give you some experience as a introduction to skydiving the other one it's made to quick jump your path to a very experienced skydiver.You have to think about your alternatives. You have to set some clear points in your mind. Think about these three options you have and then just choose one, the one that best fit your expectations. Whichever skydiving method you will choose for your first jump, will be a good one, just because you choosed it.

Let's learn a few things about each of the skydiving methods
we outlined at the beginning of this article.
Static Line - it's still evolving after more than 30 years. The first jump takes place from an altitude of 3000 feet after 4 hours of ground training. You will receive your A license after 25 free falls.

Tandem Jumping
This method is the most popular as a first jump. This method will allow you to experience skydiving without any stress. You can do your first jump with just 30 minutes of basic training. You will be assisted by a tandem master and a tandem instructor. Be prepared to spend $90 to $280 for your tandem jumping.

AFF(Accelerated Free Fall)
This is the most extreme skydiving method. You will have to exit the airplane somewhere at 11000-11500 feet, only with 2 instructors who will assist you during the AFF. For each jump you will assist to a 45 minutes ground training.
Now that you now something about all the three skydiving methods that can suit your first jump you are free to choose the one that best fit your needs and just do it, you will love to skydive from the very first moment. Have fun.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Imagine of SkyDiving


Imagine floating over the vast expanse of the earth, cherishing the natural treasures as well as feeling the calmness of the sky. Skydiving is about this. Encompassing thrills, adventure and unforgettable experiences, skydiving is a sport that involves the breaking a freefall through the use of a parachute.

Skydiving or parachuting was conventionally used to deploy military personnel in a specific area. However, this activity has transformed into an extremely popular and sought-after adventurous, recreational sport.

Jumping from an aircraft with a parachute attached to your back and free falling at unbelievable speeds to the expanse beneath is thrilling. Before the opening of the chute, one floats like a bird, soaking in the most enthralling visuals, an exalting experience indeed.

However, skydiving is not an impulse sport. Extensive training and guidance is a must to make your dive a satisfying and safe adventure ride. Apart from the parachute and parasailing expertise, the way one actually jumps is also crucial in this sport.

There are variegated techniques of skydiving, tandem and accelerated free fall being the most popular ones. The experts identify tandem skydiving as the most suitable method for novices. An instructor accompanies the diver through the entire skydiving experience. Accelerated free fall, on the other hand, allows the diver to experience a free fall for a stipulated time period, before the parachute opens. It is one of the most enthralling and fun-filled techniques of skydiving.

The sport has become immensely popular all over the globe, and apart from the regular training institutes, instructional classes for skydiving are available online as well. As the adventure-filled sport of skydiving beckons, get set to experience the ultimate.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Procedure


Typically,
a trained skydiver (or jumper) and a group of associates meet at an isolated airport, sometimes referred to as a "drop zone." A fixed base operator at that airport usually operates one or more aircraft, and takes groups of skydivers up for a fee. In the earlier days of the sport, it was common for an individual jumper to go up in a Cessna light aircraft such as C-172 or C-185. Larger DZ's near populated areas might use larger aircraft such as the Beech 18 or Douglas DC-3 aircraft for reasons of economy.

A typical jump involves individuals jumping out of aircraft (usually an airplane, but sometimes a helicopter or even the gondola of a balloon), travelling at approximately 4000 metres (around 13,000 feet) altitude, and free-falling for a period of time before activating a parachute to slow the landing down to safe speeds.

Once the parachute is opened, (usually the parachute will be fully inflated by 2,500 ft). the jumper can control his or her direction and speed with cords called "steering lines," with hand grips called "toggles" that are attached to the parachute, and so he or she can aim for the landing site and come to a relatively gentle stop in a safe landing environment. Most modern sport parachutes are self-inflating "ram-air" wings that provide control of speed and direction similar to the related paragliders. (Purists in either sport would note that paragliders have much greater lift and range, but that parachutes are designed to absorb the stresses of deployment at terminal velocity.)

By manipulating the shape of the body, as a pilot manipulates the shape of his aircraft's wings, turns, forward motion, backwards motion, and even lift can be generated. Experienced skydivers will tell someone that in freefall, one can do anything a bird can do, except go back up.
Skydivers generally do not experience a "falling" sensation due to the fact that the resistance of the air to their body at speeds above about 50 MPH provides some feeling of weight and direction. At normal exit speeds for aircraft (approx 90 MPH) there is little feeling of falling just after exit, but jumping from a balloon or helicopter can create this sensation. They reach terminal velocity (around 120 mph (190 km/h) for belly to Earth orientations, 150-200 mph (240-320 km/h) for head down orientations) and are no longer accelerating towards the ground. At this point the sensation is as of a hard wind. When they leave the plane, their momentum from the plane causes their direction of travel to change from the direction of the airplane's flight (horizontal) to the direction pulled by the force of gravity (vertical). Skydivers call this transition period "the hill", and the amount of distance they fly with the plane due to the momentum is called "forward throw". For typical people, less than 1g of force along the body's long axis is what causes the "stomach in your throat" feeling on a roller-coaster or other amusement park rides.
Most skydivers make their first jump with an experienced and trained instructor (this type of skydive may be in the form of a tandem skydive). During the tandem jump the jumpmaster is responsible for the stable exit, maintaining a proper stable freefall position, and activating and controlling the parachute. With training and experience, the fear of the first few jumps is supplanted by the tact of controlling fear so that one may come to experience the satisfaction of mastering aerial skills and performing increasingly complicated maneuvers in the sky with friends. Other training methods include static line, IAD (Instructor Assisted Deployment), and AFF (Accelerated Free-Fall) aka Progressive Free-Fall (PFF) in Canada.

At larger dropzones, mostly in the Sun Belt region of the United States, training in the sport is often conducted by full-time instructors and coaches at commercial establishments. Commercial centers often provide year-round availability, larger aircraft, and staff who are current in both their sport and their instructional skills.

In the other latitudes, where winter (or monsoons) gets in the way of year-round operation, commercial skydiving centers are less prevalent and much of the parachuting activity is carried on by clubs. These clubs tend to support smaller aircraft. Training may be offered (by instructors who are tested and certified in exactly the same way as their commercial counterparts) in occasional classes or as demand warrants. These clubs tend to be weekend only operations as the majority of the staff have full-time jobs during the week. Club members will often visit larger centers for holidays, events, and for some concentrated exposure to the latest techniques

Saturday, January 9, 2010

 
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