JeffCa 0 #1 June 7, 2014 My first was a static line jump on a round parachute. Chose it over tandem. "So many fatalities and injuries are caused by decisions jumpers make before even getting into the aircraft. Skydiving can be safe AND fun at the same time...Honest." - Bill Booth Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Arvoitus 1 #2 June 7, 2014 SL, didn't even consider a tandem as I wanted to start to skydive and learn how to do it. Also AFF wasn't available and I didn't even know of its existence until later on after I had been in the SL student program for a while.Your rights end where my feelings begin. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
galispo 0 #3 June 7, 2014 Static line. It was the only option in the DZ where I started, and I'm proud to have started that way. Did a tandem years later for a friend that was qualifying as a TI.Rob Gallo "To strive, to seek, to find and not to yield." Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
adamUK 3 #4 June 7, 2014 Static line for charity. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TampaPete 52 #5 June 7, 2014 First 5 jumps: solo 10 second freefall. August 1976 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
skygypsie 2 #6 June 7, 2014 Tandem. Actually it never entered my mind to skydive EVER ! I never knew it was an option for the general public. Met a TI, thought he was fascinating, went to DZ to 'observe' for a few hours, manifested for last load of the day, did a tandem with him, had a mal/ reserve ride, did 2 more tandems in next 2 weeks then started AFF, he taught me to pack, became DZ packer, been together every day since for 8 years, married him 4 years later Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jackwallace 3 #7 June 7, 2014 SL $19U only make 2 jumps: the first one for some weird reason and the last one that you lived through. The rest are just filler. scr 316 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JerryBaumchen 1,451 #8 June 7, 2014 Hi jack, Quote SL $19 SL $18; you got scammed. JerryBaumchen Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Croc 0 #9 June 7, 2014 Tandem, "other reason." FEAR!"Here's a good specimen of my own wisdom. Something is so, except when it isn't so." Charles Fort, commenting on the many contradictions of astronomy Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
msf 0 #10 June 7, 2014 Static Line. DZ where I did my first jump had students do 5 static lines each with a practice pull (you had to pass each with a decent exit and a good pull of the dummy handle as you came off the wing strut); when you passed your 5 static lines you progressed to what is basically AFF. I think it was called ASL. They also offered straight-to-AFF if you really wanted but they encouraged the static line route. That was good enough for me - if the people I was trusting to teach me recommended static line, then static line for me it was. Glad I did. Gave me some stories I will also remember. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
craddock 0 #11 June 8, 2014 Static line. Because I knew I wanted to be a jumper and cost effective. $205 for a class and the 5 static lines.('98 $260 now) That spot isn't bad at all, the winds were strong and that was the issue! It was just on the downwind side. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gunpaq 1 #12 June 8, 2014 Static Line from 2,800' in 1976 because that was all there was for a FJC then. Besides the FJC was $24 and $12/jump thereafter for students.www.geronimoskydiving.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
grue 1 #13 June 8, 2014 JeffCaMy first was a static line jump on a round parachute. Chose it over tandem. Static line. Knew I wasn't really interested in a "one and done", decided to go right into training. AFF was out of my price range, and a 5 hour drive minimum besides.cavete terrae. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JohnMitchell 16 #14 June 8, 2014 TampaPeteFirst 5 jumps: solo 10 second freefall. August 1976 Cool! Air Force Academy? That's how they used to train. My first was S/L round. That's all they had in '74 for FJC's. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TampaPete 52 #15 June 8, 2014 AM 490. They still train that way. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
xsniper 1 #16 June 8, 2014 JerryBaumchen Hi jack, Quote SL $19 SL $18; you got scammed. JerryBaumchen Static Line. At my drop zone in 1975 that was all there was. BUT....I got 5 for $50. I even got the bonus that one had the parachute hooked up bakwards. Good Times, Hard Landings. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jclalor 12 #17 June 8, 2014 After my 5 static line jumps in 1982, I did one "buddy jump", in hindsight, I can't believe we only jumped from 7500 ft and still managed to get stable by 6000 ft. I've never heard of a "Buddy jump" since then. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Amazon 7 #18 June 8, 2014 My first time under a parachute canopy I did not jump.. I got a lot of training on how to do it, and all the possible bad stuff that could happen... It kind of looked like a Para Commander but.... I was under it and then landed in the water. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OWt78Z5UdT8 I was at the local DZ that following Saturday for my FJC and did 2 static line jumps that day. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TheCorp 1 #19 June 8, 2014 first jump was when i was a child, i think i was 4 years old, my father was a tandem master and had gotten a child harness built. Skydiving had always been normal in my family Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
1888 0 #20 June 8, 2014 1961 - S/L on a 28' with a "T" modification. That's the way it was done back in the day. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guru312 0 #21 June 9, 2014 JeffCaMy first was a static line jump on a round parachute. My first parachute jump was a static line jump in March of 1960 during jump-week with the 82nd Airborne. The plane was a C-119 or a C-123. The jump, one of five, was static line and the canopy was a T-10. The idea of a "modified" or steerable canopy didn't seep into military jumping until some time in the mid-1970s...maybe even later. Can anyone tell me when the Airborne units started jumping steerable canopies? I don't mean SF units I mean regular airborne. My first "skydiving" parachute jump was in June 1960 from a helicopter... can't remember the designation. The rig was a 5-gore double L canopy that I modified on a home sewing machine. Most of my military and sport jumps were onto Sicily DZ although I jumped Normandy, Salerno and Nijmegan. I also made a jump into a place called Camp Mckall which is west of Ft. Bragg. I made about three times as many military jumps as the rest of the unit. To be paid our $55 per month jump pay troopers had to jump once every 90 days. Most guys only jumped the minimum. I loved jumping so much that I volunteered to jump any time that my unit, the 82nd ABN Division Artillery was scheduled to jump.Guru312 I am not DB Cooper Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Doug_Davis 0 #22 June 9, 2014 jackwallaceSL $19 SL, $free, in fact they told me I would make $110 more a month on jump status. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
riggerrob 643 #23 June 9, 2014 "... Can anyone tell me when the Airborne units started jumping steerable canopies? I don't mean SF units I mean regular airborne. ..." ................................................................................ Regular airborne still do not jump steerable canopies. If you tried adding steerable canopies to the usual .... um ... er ... "cluster" of hundreds of scared, young paratroopers loaded with rucksacks, rifles and snowshoes, you would just increase the carnage. Even the newest T-11, S/L canopy is non-steerable. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
propblast 0 #24 June 9, 2014 riggerrob"... Can anyone tell me when the Airborne units started jumping steerable canopies? I don't mean SF units I mean regular airborne. ..." ................................................................................ Regular airborne still do not jump steerable canopies. If you tried adding steerable canopies to the usual .... um ... er ... "cluster" of hundreds of scared, young paratroopers loaded with rucksacks, rifles and snowshoes, you would just increase the carnage. Even the newest T-11, S/L canopy is non-steerable. Rob, The 82d used to send guys through school to be able to jump the -1b in the 70s. Although uncommon regular airborne units have and sometimes do jump steerable roundsPropblast Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
riggerrob 643 #25 June 9, 2014 propblast***"... Can anyone tell me when the Airborne units started jumping steerable canopies? I don't mean SF units I mean regular airborne. ..." ................................................................................ Regular airborne still do not jump steerable canopies. If you tried adding steerable canopies to the usual .... um ... er ... "cluster" of hundreds of scared, young paratroopers loaded with rucksacks, rifles and snowshoes, you would just increase the carnage. Even the newest T-11, S/L canopy is non-steerable. Rob, The 82d used to send guys through school to be able to jump the -1b in the 70s. Although uncommon regular airborne units have and sometimes do jump steerable rounds .............................................................................. Military steerable chutes are usually limited to units that only jump in small groups: forward air controllers, pathfinders, search and rescue, etc. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites