Keep an Eye Out | Hung Slider

Published on Tuesday, May 1, 2018

Keep an Eye Out | Hung Slider

by Jim Crouch and Niklas Daniel

This jumper deployed his main canopy during a currency jump but did not perform a controllability check after the canopy opened. He did not realize until after he landed that the slider had stopped two feet from the top of the main risers and stayed in that position. The friction between the slider grommet and lines, along with the air inflating the slider, was the likely cause. If the jumper had noticed the stuck slider at deployment altitude and flared, holding the toggles down until the canopy’s speed dropped off, it likely would have cleared the problem at that time.

While it generally does not cause a malfunction, a stuck slider can greatly affect the performance of the canopy. Following a main canopy deployment, jumpers should perform a thorough visual inspection followed by a controllability check immediately after ensuring that the airspace is clear around them. 

 

Comments (0)Number of views (11779)

Author: Jim Crouch

Categories: Keep An Eye Out

Tags: May 2018

Print
 
Living and Learning
Mar 13, 2026

Living and Learning

Clear Minds: Marijuana, Skydiving and the Changing Legal Landscape
Mar 09, 2026

Clear Minds: Marijuana, Skydiving and the Changing Legal Landscape

 

 
Photo by Alex Swindle

Wingsuiter Ben Poling takes a dock with a smiling Colby Groves at the Who In The Ville Stole the Christmas Boogie at Skydive Arizona in Eloy.

Skydive Store

 

Squirrel

Seas the Day
Features | May 01, 2020

Seas the Day

The New Normal—Safety Day 2020
Features | May 01, 2020

The New Normal—Safety Day 2020

Non-Fatal Incident Summary
Features | May 01, 2020

Non-Fatal Incident Summary

Squirrel

Safety Check | Look It Up
Safety Check | May 01, 2020

Safety Check | Look It Up

USPA SIS

Donors
Five Minute Call | May 01, 2020

Donors

USPA SIS

First7172737476787980Last