Container Lock

Published on Friday, November 3, 2017

Container Lock

A jumper flying her wingsuit attempted to deploy her main canopy at 3,500 feet. A few seconds after she threw her pilot chute, she saw the pilot chute trailing behind her, so she pulled her reserve ripcord. The reserve deployed and was fully inflated by 2,000 feet. The main canopy remained in the container after the reserve deployed.

Upon landing, the jumper discovered that the main container locked closed when the closing pin jammed into the collapsible-pilot-chute-indicator window on the pilot chute bridle. The closing pin on this jumper’s equipment attached via a tab to the side of the bridle, which provided enough slack to allow it to wedge into the indicator window. Some manufacturers have developed alternative packing instructions that route the main bridle below the main container flaps to prevent this type of malfunction from occurring.      

Comments (0)Number of views (12192)
Print
 

 

 
Photo by David Cherry

At Skydive Arizona in Eloy, (clockwise from “driver”) Carlo Manuel, Dan Baker, Sam Laliberte and Joel Tremblay perform a car-drop stunt to promote Cleared Hot’s Vet Boogie.

SDEgypt

 

Stolen Gear

Mike Bohn | D-28398
Profiles | Dec 01, 2018

Mike Bohn | D-28398

Saturday, December 1, 2018

Letters | Dec 01, 2018

Letters

USPA SIS

November 1968 Editorial
Letters | Nov 13, 2018

November 1968 Editorial

USPA Board Elections Conclude
Industry News | Nov 05, 2018

USPA Board Elections Conclude

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

One-Armed Canopy Flight

Squirrel

Skydive Store

First121122123124126128129130Last