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by: Malcolm Snook
After World War Two a skydiving club was
established at Thruxton airfield near Andover in Hampshire,
southern England. The British skydiving Club used old
(even then) Jackaroo biplanes, ex military parachutes
and the club members were pioneers who would go on to
found other skydiving clubs, become National Coaches
and so on.
Today we're quite familiar with square
parachutes that glide and perform like a hang glider,
indeed it's possible to strap an engine to someone's
back with a propeller in a cage, attach a modern square
parachute to their shoulders and hey presto they can
fly. We're also accustomed to the idea of buddy jumps
where a would-be skydiver, or someone who just wants
a one off experience can be attached to the front of
an experienced jumper and do a minute's free-fall from
twelve thousand feet on their first jump, often their
only jump for the 'I've done that' box ticking character.
The buddy jump is only possible because
these days reserve parachutes are worn on the back as
well as the main parachute, which has traditionally
been worn there, this in turn is a result of parachutes
getting smaller and lighter, making it possible for
two to be worn mounted one above the other in a tandem
rig as they were originally called. No need to differentiate
today, all kit is like that.
Not so long ago all parachutes were round,
heavy and bulky and reserve parachutes were worn on
the front of the body. Strangely parachuting as a sport
may even have peaked in the nineteen seventies, when
this was still largely the case. In the early nineteen
seventies the Parafoil square parachute became available
and even triangular parachutes based on the Rogallo
wing were experimented with, whilst other companies
developed the high performance round with an inverted
apex, extended high pressure area and a myriad of slits,
holes and control lines.
None of these designs was a hundred percent
certain to open without malfunction, so skydivers used
a plain round reserve that was more than ninety nine
percent reliable! The first commercially successful
square parachute was the Strato Star, later followed
by a larger version, the Strato Cloud. Early 'Stars'
had a reefing system using lines and rings around the
periphery to control the potentially back breaking opening
shock. This was also a complexity that could lead to
a malfunction and it was ordinary sport jumpers who
pioneered the use of a slider which slid down the rigging
lines as the parachute opened to control the opening
sequence.
The slider itself could cause a problem
if too large or too small and sliders with holes in
and various designs were experimented with until reliability
was achieved. Today, sport jumpers use square reserves
and are happy to wear them on their backs, where they
cannot see them, nor reach them with their hands, so
reliable has the equipment become.
In the nineteen seventies
experienced sport parachutists generally jumped high
performance rounds and by the end of that decade pretty
much all of them were jumping squares, all students
however were still jumping rounds, usually ex military
kit even then. Experienced jumpers on squares still
trusted to round reserves. The accelerated free-fall
course hadn't been invented and the sponsored jump for
charity was a new trendy innovation.
Both Britain and America had a plethora
of sport parachute clubs and there were quite a few
in Spain, France and elsewhere in Europe not to mention
Australia and elsewhere. The British Parachute Club
at Thruxton did not survive but the RSA Parachute Club
moved to Thruxton from Blackbushe airport and at it's
peak in the mid seventies trained as many as seven thousand
new jumpers a year quite something given the British
weather. The other full time club at Peterborough almost
certainly did similar numbers and before long there
was a third full time club at Headcorn in Kent as well
as weekend only clubs spread around the country. For
an in depth understanding of the skydiving scene in
the nineteen seventies get a copy of the book 'Of Land,
Sea And Sky.'
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About The Author
Malcolm
Snook has been a skydiving instructor, car and
motorcycle racer, dance teacher, advertising executive
and entrepreneur and a long distance sailor. He
currently lives on an old sailing ketch and writes.
http://www.oflandseaandsky.com
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Article Source: Article
City
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