Recommended Posts
There is a flaw in your logic comparing Reserves and AADs.
Regardless of how impeccable one packs, the inevitability of a malfunctioning main does still exist and despite our diligency in packing correctly, it happens frequently, some would say 1 in 1000 jumps on average, could be higher, could be lower, but its important to remember that if jumped enough, every main will eventually have a malfunction.
Regarding the need for an AAD, that is a malfunction of the person, not the gear, that typically leads to a cypress fire. And unlike mains, there exists no inevitabilty that all jumpers will have a mental malfunction. Most all infact do not.
How many thousands of skydivers are out there that jump with AADs their whole career and never have an AAD fire? Most skydivers I would presume, making 1000s ands 1000s of jumps, and never need their AADs. Ask those same thousands of skydivers how many have had a reserve ride? Most will say they have.
So there is where your arguement is faulty, your reserve is a peice of equipement that acknowledges the unavoidable imperfection of your gear. Your AAD acknowledges the unaviodable imperfection in people. The different is A) the expected frequency of the imperfections occuring (gear = common, human error = uncommon)and B) what we can do to prevent the gear or human malfunctions from occuring.
--
My other ride is a RESERVE.
Regardless of how impeccable one packs, the inevitability of a malfunctioning main does still exist and despite our diligency in packing correctly, it happens frequently, some would say 1 in 1000 jumps on average, could be higher, could be lower, but its important to remember that if jumped enough, every main will eventually have a malfunction.
Regarding the need for an AAD, that is a malfunction of the person, not the gear, that typically leads to a cypress fire. And unlike mains, there exists no inevitabilty that all jumpers will have a mental malfunction. Most all infact do not.
How many thousands of skydivers are out there that jump with AADs their whole career and never have an AAD fire? Most skydivers I would presume, making 1000s ands 1000s of jumps, and never need their AADs. Ask those same thousands of skydivers how many have had a reserve ride? Most will say they have.
So there is where your arguement is faulty, your reserve is a peice of equipement that acknowledges the unavoidable imperfection of your gear. Your AAD acknowledges the unaviodable imperfection in people. The different is A) the expected frequency of the imperfections occuring (gear = common, human error = uncommon)and B) what we can do to prevent the gear or human malfunctions from occuring.
--
My other ride is a RESERVE.
Fully agreed. What do you believe the original “intended purpose” of an AAD is?
Share this post
Link to post
Share on other sites