One-Armed Canopy Flight
Foundations of Flight | Nov 01, 2018
One-Armed Canopy Flight

Axis Flight School

There may come a time when you wish to make an adjustment to your equipment after you have unstowed your brakes. Whether it’s routine or an emergency, having the ability and know-how to fly your parachute with one hand may be of great value. However, you should isolate this skill and practice it before relying on it when it counts.

When exploring this set of exercises, consider performing them during a hop-and-pop to give yourself clear airspace. Also, you should be comfortable with and proficient at flying the parachute you use for the drill. To stay on task, frequently re-assess and evaluate the traffic around you, your altitude and your relative position over the ground. If you wear a hand-mounted altimeter, take care not to get it caught on your toggles. Discontinue all drills at or above 2,500 feet AGL.

Performance Objectives

• Explore your parachute in a new and fun way to build skill, insight and versatility.

• Gain the ability to continue operating your parachute system after an arm or shoulder injury.

• Gain the ability to adjust equipment (cameras, jumpsuit, zippers, harness, etc.) after performing your canopy controllability check.

• Learn how to maintain control of your parachute if you need to disconnect your reserve static line below your decision altitude (e.g., for a water landing or other situation-specific event).

Execution

Once you are under canopy and have performed a controllability check, bring your hands to approximately the quarter-brakes position. While the canopy is braked, pass a toggle of your choosing in front of your body to the opposite hand while keeping the fingers of your receiving hand perpendicular to your spine. Ensure that both toggles rest firmly at the blade of your hand, then make a fist to secure them both. The arm of your empty hand can come to rest at your side, or you can hold on to your chest strap if you prefer. When you are done with the discovery drills, return to flying your parachute with one toggle in each hand by reversing the order of the instructions above.

Learn to fly the parachute in this manner with both your left and right hand.

Caution: Orienting your fingers toward the canopy may result in the toggles releasing from your hands. In that event, you can locate the toggle at the guide ring of the rear riser.

Jumpers with arm or hand amputations and jumpers who injure their arms on a jump need to unstow their toggles with one hand. This is a complex task that requires further instruction than that contained in this article. 

 

Discovery Drills

When both toggles are in one hand, the canopy will be in brakes as you perform each maneuver. Even if you raise your hand as much as possible, the trailing edge of the canopy is still being pulled down. (For more on braked canopy flight, see “Foundations of Flight—Braked Canopy Flight,” July 2015 Parachutist).

Heading Control: Execute 180-degree turns to the left and right. Pull both toggles to your right to navigate left and vice versa. It will be more difficult to turn in the direction of the hand that holds both toggles, as you are not able to pull both toggles as far across your body. (If you have to fly a landing pattern, realize that a left-hand landing pattern will be easier to navigate if you’re flying with your right hand and vice versa.) For more responsive handling, shift your weight in the direction you wish to go. Once facing your desired heading, you may have to compensate for built-up inertia by counter-steering the initial input.

Practice Flares: Simulate a landing by flaring the parachute. This will require more strength than a typical flare, as one arm is doing all the work. Remember to push your hand downward during the flare rather than pulling. The goal is to the keep the wing level during the flare. To accomplish this, move your hand in a straight line close to your body, passing your hand between your eyes, past your sternum and belly button to between your thighs.

You should practice this drill above 2,500 feet. Do not attempt to execute a real landing with one hand.

Pro Tip

When landing, sticking your arm out in the direction that you are falling can help level out the canopy.

 

The authors intend this article to be an educational guideline. It is not a substitute for professional instruction.

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Kerry

12/1/2018 3:56 AM

This article really hits home with me. I had a very hard opening on jump #17 which broke my right shoulder in 7 places. My first thought when I came to was “they didn’t go over this in class” then I had to figure shit out. Thankfully I did and the techniques described in this article are exactly what I used to get back to the DZ and land safely while in a very stressful situation. A year and a $30,000 shoulder later I came back to the sport. I had to have a left handed BOC because of my right arm limits, but now 173 jumps later I couldn’t imagine my life without skydiving. Blue Skies

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