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digitalamnesia

jump alltitudes

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>what is the highest safe alltitude you can jump from?

Jumps from 102,000 feet have been made with a pressure suit. Safe limit for a normal skydive is around 15,000 feet. With onboard oxygen, around 22,000. With bailout oxygen, up to 40,000. Using bailout oxygen adds another level of risk, so I don't know if you would call it safe - but it's done pretty regularly.


>And what is the highest you have jumped from?

26,000 feet.

Edited to add -

Highest without O2 - 17,500 (14K AGL jump at Lost Prairie - I was pretty hypoxic)

Lowest exit skydiving - 1700
Lowest jump - 230

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I was woundering (please forgive my newbe-ness :S) what is the highest safe alltitude you can jump from? And what is the highest you have jumped from? :P



The highest safe altitude would be about 3 feet. Jumping from airplanes can be hazardous to you health.
But you can mitigate the danger, to some degree, at all altitudes by following accepted and proven safety practices.

Highest I have jumped is 30,000 feet, several times.


Sparky
My idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals

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I've jumped from 18,500. Wish we'd had oxygen.



This is a recurring theme, that caught me off guard.

The airport/dz I am jumping at has an elevation of 5052 feet. Or normal exit altitude is just under 18K above sea level to make a 12-13K jump.

I wonder, how much does your normal "base line" altitude adjust your tolerance for hypoxia, and how long does it take to establish a base line? In other words:

1) If my bed I sleep in every night is at 5,296' (which it is) - and I get in a plane to 18K the next morning - will I likely suffer the same hypoxia as someone who lives at sea level and goes up to 18K above their DZ? I.E. The net change in altitude vs. total altitude?

2) If I travel to sea level and am there for, lets say, 24 hours before I jump, will I have a higher tolerance for altitude than some of the locals? How long before my tolerance “wears off”?

3) If a friend visits me from sea level, and has only been here for, lets say, 24 hours, and then gets in a plane to 18K, will he suffer greater hypoxia? How long before my friend gets “more tolerance”?

Perhaps off topic of the thread, but still worth discussing since someone might get the impression they can jump something they can't w/out O2 by this thread.

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Living at high altitude gives you an advantage. At 5000 feet, you've got 80% the oxygen than at sea level. You're more acclimatized. I don't know how quickly you lose it when you go lower. Two factors are heart size and hemaglobin levels, and I don't think they change rapidly. I also don't think 24 hours is enough to acclimatize much, but I really don't know. Any mountaineering experts out there?

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You do acclimatise. I don't have data to hand, but folk who live high in the Andes typically have significantly larger lungs and hearts to cope with the altitude.

Hunting down research related to soccer matches played in La Paz, Bolivia (c. 3500m above sea level) could provide some of the information you're looking for.

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While there is added risk with carrying oxygen, I wouldn't consider that unsafe; so, around 30k is safe enough for me. Personally, I've done 23k. I wasn't inclined to get up early to do 30k or spend the cash for the extra 7k.

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the depth of his depravity sickens me.
-- Jerry Falwell, People v. Larry Flynt

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Safe limit for a normal skydive is around 15,000 feet.



I agree Here - It seems that any higher than 15,000 feet is just too much of a risk without oxygen in the aircraft. Correct me if I am wrong, but technically shouldn't any jump above 14,000 feet msl require oxygen on the way up? It would seem to me that most DZO's and pilots will take a jumper to 15,000 feet agl without thinking much of it - 15k agl doesn't seem to be a very big problem - unless you start running into different types of airspace...
=========Shaun ==========


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While there is added risk with carrying oxygen, I wouldn't consider that unsafe; so, around 30k is safe enough for me. Personally, I've done 23k. I wasn't inclined to get up early to do 30k or spend the cash for the extra 7k.



At 30,000 feet MSL you can up dead in a hurry and not even know it. At 20,000 feet your Time of useful consciousness (effective performance time) is measured in minutes. (5-12) At 30,000 feet your Time of useful consciousness is measured in seconds. (45-75) And these times were developed with the body at rest. With mild activity they can be cut in half.

A jump from high altitude, 20,000 to 40,000 feet MSL, is not just another skydive with extra freefall.

Sparky
My idea of a fair fight is clubbing baby seals

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Highest was the typical Mullins 23k or so.

Interesting one, I was doing tandems at a multiple plane boogie out of a King Air. More than once the pilot informed me (tandems sat back to the panel in the copilot seat in that King Air) that we were going to have to “wait” for traffic, which in a King Air means more altitude. I had a 110lb woman, and being August decided to do the tandem in T shirt and shorts, same that she was wearing, on this one I looked at the altimeter in the plane as jumpers were leaving, 18,300 MSL (I don’t think he was a very experienced jump pilot)! My thoughts as I scoot to the door ‘shit’, “I’m glad I don’t smoke”, “wonder if my passenger smokes, hope she don’t go out on me”. I wasn’t feeling hypoxic at all; time spent up there was really short. Tandem went really well, but in freefall I was thinking “what a waste of perfectly good altitude”, almost 12k freefall on a tandem!
Experience is what you get when you thought you were going to get something else.

AC DZ

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wow! thanks for the input guys and gals. there is some interesting stuff here.

lol about the 'safe is 3 feet' post, that tickled me!

to be honest im not actually sure what i meant by 'safe' becasuse it is safe to go above 15, 000 ft with oxygen, but its not safe without oxygen. ive learnt a couple of things in this topic and im greatfull for your replys. :)
-------------------------------------------------------

if you wanna see the rainbow, you gotta put up with the rain

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I have done a couple of tandems from 19,000' without oxygen or drogues.
Students were pretty hypoxic, so I had to carry them the length of a Dornier 228. They were really relaxed in freefall.
That was back in the days when I thought a 20 kilometer run was a good way to clear a hang-over on a Sunday morning.
In retrospect, jumping from 19,000' without oxygen was not very bright.

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