Getting my Airborne Wings

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • RFLMN1
    Freedom isn't Free
    • Oct 2003
    • 90

    #16
    PLFs are beat to death because they are the most important part. I couldnt imagine doing a mass tactical jump if everyone had steerables, easily 100 other sharks out there stealing my air, making me fall faster so they can get the ideal spot on the ground to land. You guys are lucky when I went through if you failed anything you where set home not recycled.

    Jason

    Comment

    • luke
      lukescustoms.com

      • Jan 2001
      • 8211

      #17
      We still use the "old" round canopy's for the very fact that they AREN'T fully controllable. Round canopies have a good military habit of falling fairly straight down, assuring that the chalk all fall into the same DZ.
      Thanks for the answers, I've wonder for years why they chose those canopies.

      If everyone used a ram-air, they would be all over the place, looking for the best place to hit....thing is, EVERYONE would pick the SAME best spot Also, your position in the air can seriously mess up a chalk when your ram-air opens in the opposite direction. This would immediately force you into a spin, or into a fellow jumper.
      You can put a large amount of people in a very small area, BUT generally these are very high skilled jumpers with 10s of thousands of jumps logged. I understand that the military can not devote the amount of time it would take to train them though.

      Round canopies simply open the same, regardless of your position in the air. Ram-air also take a slight longer to deploy, which would be a bad thing at minimum combat drop altitude.
      Ram air systems can open slower because of how they are packed. If you "roll" the nose you can get a slower opening which is prefered at 1500' or higher. If you're at 300' you need a quick opening! Reserves are packed to open quickly (nose not rolled), talk about a neck jerker! You're crusing at no less than 120 mph and you deploy your reserve, your reserve inflates in approx 1 second, that is one heavy brake! I've been in several "hairy" situations but only 1 reserve ride.

      There are a few things ya gotta do on the way down, BEFORE you grab the risers and start to steer (round cans are steerable to quite a degree). Ram-airs do not give you that leeway, as they must be steered right away.
      At low alt. I can see where that would be a problem.

      Special applications demand ram-air, but general combat drops need the control over mass personel drops provided by round chutes.
      It makes more sense now.

      With all that said I would still hate to do a PLF with 100lbs of gear straped to my body!

      PS don't take any statements as an arguement, that's not my intention.

      Comment

      • spyderkiller
        Intellectual Giant
        • Jul 2001
        • 438

        #18
        Originally posted by Jakedubbleya
        so whats ur MOS anyway?
        No MOS as of yet. Disclaimer: No Spamming please, if you don't understand something about what I'm about to say, just ask.
        I'm an ROTC cadet, and airborne training is optional during the summer, along with other army schools. The better ROTC programs in the country are given a certain number of slots to airborne, air assault, sapper, etc. schools. Obviously they only send cadets who they feel will be able to complete the training without a problem. I am receiving a certain amount of flack here from some of the enlisted guys, mostly specialists it seems, who hate the idea that in a couple of years I"ll be an officer. The ones they should really get mad at are the West Pointers though...they're the ones who seem to think they're God's gift to the Army (some of them, not all). Well i'll try to reply in a more timely fassion from now on, seeing as how I have nothing else to do here at night than go to the library.

        And Sheperds we shall be / For thee, my Lord, for thee / Power hath descended forth from Thy hand / Our feet may swiftly carry out Thy commands. / So we shall flow a river forth to Thee / And teeming with souls shall it ever be. / In Nomeni Patri Et Fili Spiritus Sa

        Comment

        • Eagle
          The hand of vengence
          • May 2001
          • 950

          #19
          Well buddy, I just finished 5 years in the Navy, and any officer had to prove his worth to earn my respect. And any that came from 'Canoe U' didn't stand a chance. All the academies make their people feel that way.
          Die Screaming

          Brass Eagle Stingray
          12oz CO2
          VL 200

          Comment

          • spyderkiller
            Intellectual Giant
            • Jul 2001
            • 438

            #20
            Originally posted by Eagle
            Well buddy, I just finished 5 years in the Navy, and any officer had to prove his worth to earn my respect. And any that came from 'Canoe U' didn't stand a chance. All the academies make their people feel that way.
            I'm confused...how do all academies make their people feel? I know full well that respect is something you have to earn, but it's pretty sad that most enlisted guys view cadets in a negative light until proven otherwise. A clean state would be appreciated is all I'm saying. And trust me, on more than one occassion while here, cadets (either myself or another) have proven to NCOs, Officers, and Joe that we're more than competent enough to be airborne (which doesn't actually say a lot) and future officers.

            Anyway, another update...just finishing up tower week here and our first jump is Monday, scheduled for 1200. I'll let you know how it goes and if I still have both legs in tact.

            And Sheperds we shall be / For thee, my Lord, for thee / Power hath descended forth from Thy hand / Our feet may swiftly carry out Thy commands. / So we shall flow a river forth to Thee / And teeming with souls shall it ever be. / In Nomeni Patri Et Fili Spiritus Sa

            Comment

            • Eagle
              The hand of vengence
              • May 2001
              • 950

              #21
              well, part of it is precidence. The rest is just that most academy grads, while not incompetent, seem to think that those of us guys on the deck plates seem to think that we are incompetent, but still good enough to do 95% of the commands work, including all the dirty work. Where on the other hand, those who got their commisions from other sources tend to have a little more respect for us blue shirts, and often time aren't afraid to role up their sleeves either.
              Die Screaming

              Brass Eagle Stingray
              12oz CO2
              VL 200

              Comment

              • Jakedubbleya
                Don Quixote
                • Mar 2005
                • 631

                #22
                id just apply for officer training after finishing school in the army's programs, taking a few years off and geting a decent graduate degree. id come back after having been an NCO (hopefully lol), get my silver bar, then work up from there.

                but of course not everybody wants to be a lifer and ROTC is great if u just want ur schooling paid for.

                anyway its still a toss up from the docs whether im even joining or not. piece of advice for future applicants: dont say you ever went to a psycologist on ur forms, for any reason, lol. my parents made me go when i was ten, i wasnt diagnosed with anything, and they are STILL making me get a waiver.

                apparently honesty doesnt pay in the army, i was sickened when my recruiters told me to lie about everything. just because im the only guy with enough intergrity to be honest about my history, leaves me a target for the PITA beurocracy.

                sorry for getting so off topic spyder, have fun on monday.
                Last edited by Jakedubbleya; 07-21-2005, 07:24 PM.

                Comment

                • Eagle
                  The hand of vengence
                  • May 2001
                  • 950

                  #23
                  Originally posted by Jakedubbleya
                  apparently honesty doesnt pay in the army, i was sickened when my recruiters told me to lie about everything. just because im the only guy with enough intergrity to be honest about my history, leaves me a target for the PITA beurocracy.

                  Welcome to Club Beurocracy, been there done that. Half my sub school class was held up in training because of similar reasons. Me, I knew already by that time to BWB-Baffle 'em With Bull!@#$ on the psych forms.
                  Die Screaming

                  Brass Eagle Stingray
                  12oz CO2
                  VL 200

                  Comment

                  • spyderkiller
                    Intellectual Giant
                    • Jul 2001
                    • 438

                    #24
                    Eagle, I can see where you're coming from there, and I think you're totally correct. A lot of new officers think they're too good to get down and dirty with their men. I don't plan on being one of those officers. I'm not trying to generalize, but it seems that those who graduate from the academies, such as West Point think they know everything. I know I don't know everything and realize that the NCOs in my platoon will be the ones I will be relying on because they've been there and know how things work. Like I already said though, that doesn't mean that I'm going to rely on them to do all of the dirty work as well. After all I am still supposed to be the leader of the platoon, and plan on leading by example.

                    And Sheperds we shall be / For thee, my Lord, for thee / Power hath descended forth from Thy hand / Our feet may swiftly carry out Thy commands. / So we shall flow a river forth to Thee / And teeming with souls shall it ever be. / In Nomeni Patri Et Fili Spiritus Sa

                    Comment

                    • kosmo
                      KaPTaiN KeNNy
                      • Dec 2000
                      • 1642

                      #25
                      The reason youre getting a lot of flak from specialists is because theyve generally been around long enough to see stupid lieutennants, but they arent disciplined sergeants yet who dont talk about the boss in front of other people. And as far as academy nutcases, they think theyre king of the hill, that they know everything, and that as a commissioned officer they are better people than everyone else. Until they go to jail for sleeping with a privates wife while hes deployed anyway, but thats neither here nor there.
                      Kosmo For President '08, '12, '16... However long it takes

                      Comment

                      Working...