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This may not be that as extreme as the next phrase I use, but nowadays, with the many inexpensive freefly friendly rigs on the market getting a Vector2 just because it's cheap, and dumping $$$ into it so you can freefly with it is like polishing a turd - at the end it may look good, but it's still a turd.
Like I advised you a few weeks earlier - spend a few more hundred bucks, and get something that was made to be FF friendly. I have bought plenty of nice containers for around $400 - $500. Not a big price to pay for being safe.
I forgot that I posted that earlier thread. I must be losing my mind...

And I know the deals are out there, and 500 or so seems reasonable. But I haven't found anything for that price yet...maybe I'm not looking hard enough.
rhys 0
i ended us selling the container only for 200 and the reserve for 350.
there are lots of good deals, peolpe just feel like there is a a problem when they see them??!
hookitt 1
The rig in perfect condition is not suitable for freeflying.
Good luck.
gjhdiver 0
I did one freefly type jump on my old Vector II, and I had to cut away when the toggles came out and wrapped up in the canopy on opening. The Vector II was a great rig for the day when FS was all there was. By the time you've spent enough on it to try to make it work, it still won't be safe, and you could have bought a more modern, safer alternative.
Don't. Just don't. By the time you made the thing truly freefly friendly, it probably won't be able to open.
I did one freefly type jump on my old Vector II, and I had to cut away when the toggles came out and wrapped up in the canopy on opening. The Vector II was a great rig for the day when FS was all there was. By the time you've spent enough on it to try to make it work, it still won't be safe, and you could have bought a more modern, safer alternative.
I guess I will probably just work on my belly flying, put a hundred or so jumps on it, and will look for a different container in the meantime.
tetra316 0
Don't. Just don't. By the time you made the thing truly freefly friendly, it probably won't be able to open.
I did one freefly type jump on my old Vector II, and I had to cut away when the toggles came out and wrapped up in the canopy on opening. The Vector II was a great rig for the day when FS was all there was. By the time you've spent enough on it to try to make it work, it still won't be safe, and you could have bought a more modern, safer alternative.
I guess I will probably just work on my belly flying, put a hundred or so jumps on it, and will look for a different container in the meantime.
Excellent idea. The best freeflyers are also very good at belly flying.
Like I advised you a few weeks earlier - spend a few more hundred bucks, and get something that was made to be FF friendly. I have bought plenty of nice containers for around $400 - $500. Not a big price to pay for being safe.
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