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Posts Tagged ‘Skydiving Equipment’

Choosing the Right Skydiving Equipment

Thursday, November 4th, 2010

Everyone getting ready to go skydiving should make absolutely sure that they have the appropriate gear. You will want to look into your own comfort while sky diving, but also, the essential is the safety equipment used. All of this appropriate skydiving equipment is what makes the differences between being able to enthusiastically tell the story of your skydiving experience for many years to come. The right skydiving gear will turn the trip into an exhilarating experience that you will never forget.

In order to go sky diving in style, you will need everything from a suit to boots and head gear. Skydiving is an activity that often times warrants renting equipment instead of purchasing it because of the sheer cost of buying everything that is needed for an activity that you’re going to do only a couple times a year. In fact, most companies that offer their services for taking people up into the sky and advising them on the moment to drop include the price of equipment rental in their fee. It is only logical that sky diving gear should be provided by the company who is taking you sky diving.

For customers getting ready to jump, sky diving is not at all an every day occurrence; the feeling of getting ready to jump is totally different for the jumper than for the people who go up with the plane every day to facilitate clients’ skydiving experience. Sky diving equipment, though high on the list of importance for safety reasons, is not a focal point for people who see sky diving up close every day of the week. Of course, they are not looking to cause accidents, but for them, a parachute is a parachute, not a magic wand. Skydiving equipment should be of top quality to begin with as well as being flawlessly maintained and carefully checked after each jump. As you choose a company that will be your host for your sky diving equipment, make sure that quality is highest on your list of priorities.

Wearing Skydiving Parachuting Gear

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

It used to be in the 1980′s that parachute pants were all the rage in hip-hop fashion; if you’re old enough, you can think back to kids wearing MC Hammer parachute pants to school, singing “Can’t Touch This” and dancing down the halls. Those days are long gone, thankfully, and though skydiving pants are still part of some alternative fashion ensembles, such as hippy pants and other baggy gear that twenty-first century hippy types like to wear, they are very much an important part of skydiving gear in general.

And what’s more important to skydivers but their gear? It is their gear that protects their lives and they in fact put their lives in the hands of the gear, so to speak. Now you can see the importance of skydiving pants. Skydivers can wear jeans or shorts underneath their parachute pants depending on the weather, but they sure as heck better have those skydiving pants on over the top. These pants are part of the whole jumpsuit. These aren’t necessary required to leap out of a plane, but they can help to control your speed and give you more control when you’re in free fall. These jumpsuits tend to be made in two general styles. They can be made of special slippery fabrics and tailored tight around the body for faster speeds, or they can be designed in that typical MC Hammer baggy fashion with canvas-like material to help slow down fall speeds.

Other clothing that doubles as protective and practical gear for skydivers includes a helmet and goggles. Helmets are mandatory clothing for beginner jumpers, but don’t be embarrassed if you happen to be one, most experts wear them too. You can even individualize yours, choosing from styles like old leather football helmets to hard, motorcycle-like helmets. Depending on your helmet, you may need to protect your eyes with goggles. The pants, suits, and helmets are just one aspect of your skydiving equipment. Other gear includes an automatic activation device (or AAD). which helps to safeguard you in case you drop too low in altitude without pulling your cord, the AAD does it automatically for you. Also, there is the reserve static line (or RSL). which is another safety device. The RSL is your lifeline and pull cord for your reserve parachute.