Oct 04, 2024

Safety Check | Drawing the Line Behind You

Jen Sharp, Ph.D.
 

 

Ask A Rigger | Should I Get Leg-Pad Covers?

Published on Friday, July 21, 2023

Ask A Rigger | Should I Get Leg-Pad Covers?


These after-market leg pads are paying for themselves jump by jump.

Leg pads tell a story. Good decisions regarding canopy choice, whether to jump in certain weather conditions and performing landings within your skill range are emblazoned on two wide strips for everyone behind you to see. So is the evidence of overconfidence, downsizing too soon and a whole range of choices leading to slide-in or butt landings.

In the old days, a rig’s leg straps consisted only of webbing. Then manufacturers started dressing them up with protective nylon and adding posher and posher leg pads. Now it’s like a Lexus down there, making that first scuff on your new $4,000 container agonizing.

The outer sheaths of the leg pads that come on contemporary leg straps serve an essential purpose: They provide at least one layer to protect the harness from damage during a bad landing. So, they’re more than just bling. Once they’ve done their job on a poorly executed downwinder, you will need to replace them or at least sew over the worn areas to protect your leg straps.

Factory replacement leg pads cost nearly $200, and that doesn’t include the labor for a Federal Aviation Administration Master Rigger to remove and replace them. Your original leg pads are sewn to the harness. “Needle to harness”—the quick and dirty criterion for what constitutes a major repair according to the FAA—means you need a master rigger. In practice, picking off the old leg pads isn’t for the inexperienced or faint-hearted. One slip, and it’s a new pair of leg straps. Your master rigger must also judge whether the leg straps have had too many pokes with a sewing machine needle to return to service … rare but a consideration.

In a perfect world, you’d stand up every landing ... but it’s skydiving. Inexpensive, slip-on leg pad covers provide good insurance against the occasional lapse in awesomeness since you can brush off much of the caked-in mud or grass you bring back from the landing area after everything dries. If not? Toss them in the washing machine. And if that’s not good enough, they cost only a third of the price or less than sewn-on leg pads and no labor to slide the old ones off and new ones back on. So that’s why you might consider a pair. (Full disclosure: The author makes and sells leg pad covers.)

Most manufacturers offer leg pad covers as an option when ordering new or after the fact, and some come in matching colors, too. Alternatively, anyone who can handle an industrial sewing machine can build them for you, although different rigs have different requirements. And just sliding something over your leg straps and leg pads shouldn’t trip the FAA’s requires-a-rigger switch, senior or master.

You’ll see many great solutions for leg pad covers to protect what protects your leg straps. They also give you the confidence to slide in a landing that maybe you really shouldn’t run out without worrying about a permanent grass stain or blemish. So, leg pad covers help preserve the integrity and value of your rig’s derriere supports. And is there any place that’s more worth it?

Kevin Gibson | D-6943 and FAA-Designated Parachute Rigger Examiner
Rahlmo’s Rigging at Skydive Orange in Virginia

Rate this article:
3.3
Comments (0)Number of views (9915)
Print

Leave a comment

This form collects your name, email, IP address and content so that we can keep track of the comments placed on the website. For more info check our Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use where you will get more info on where, how and why we store your data.
Add comment
 
Photo by Preston Pettigrew

While making a tandem skydive with instructor Leland Procell at Orange Skies Free Fall Center in Fort Morgan, Colorado, tattoo artist Katie Casey begins inking the leg of drop zone owner Mike Bohn with a canopy design that she later finished on the ground.

Peregrine

 

Squirrel

John Bull | D-6450
Profiles | Jun 01, 2017

John Bull | D-6450

Minimum Age to Skydive
Gearing Up | Jun 01, 2017

Minimum Age to Skydive

15 Minutes of Fame
Tales from the Bonfire | May 01, 2017

15 Minutes of Fame

Squirrel

Up is the New Down
Features | May 01, 2017

Up is the New Down

Lisa Mazzetta | D-30274
Profiles | May 01, 2017

Lisa Mazzetta | D-30274

ATC Corporate Privatization
Gearing Up | May 01, 2017

ATC Corporate Privatization

A Jump Story
Gearing Up | Apr 01, 2017

A Jump Story

Stolen Gear

Stranger (DZ) Danger
Tales from the Bonfire | Apr 01, 2017

Stranger (DZ) Danger

Omar Alhegelan | D-16239
Profiles | Apr 01, 2017

Omar Alhegelan | D-16239

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

2016 Year in Review
Gearing Up | Mar 02, 2017

2016 Year in Review

USPA SIS

First143144145146148150151152Last