airborne31582 0 #1 March 30, 2004 I was in one of my engineeering classes earlier today, naturally bored as hell, so i kind of came up with a wierd question. Has anyone ever done 4-way upside down? instead of belly to earth, back to earth? That would be kind of cool to see, what do you guys think? Chris I thought of the odds of me succeeding, versus the odds I was doing something incredibly stupid, and I went ahead anyway. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BETO74 0 #2 March 30, 2004 I think you should pay attention to your class.http://web.mac.com/ac057a/iWeb/AC057A/H0M3.html Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
smooth 0 #3 March 30, 2004 On the Majik DVD there's a dive where they're turning pieces with two on their backs and two fact to earth. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Harksaw 0 #4 March 30, 2004 I once had a 4 way leave with grips that got a little screwy, we all were on our backs in a round, then one guy flips himself and pulled the whole group back on their bellies. That was pretty cool.__________________________________________________ I started skydiving for the money and the chicks. Oh, wait. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SkymonkeyONE 4 #5 March 30, 2004 People used to do that stuff all the time. Watch any old Freak Brothers Convention tape and see plenty of it. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
piisfish 140 #6 March 30, 2004 i tried some 2 way like that, not very easy though... need some training.scissors beat paper, paper beat rock, rock beat wingsuit - KarlM Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pilotdave 0 #7 March 30, 2004 I always thought that would make a great competition... 4 novices on belly, 4 pros on their backs. Then I found out that deland majik trains on their backs so maybe it wouldn't be so fair. Dave Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
darkwing 5 #8 March 31, 2004 as early as the mid-1970's we had upside-down 4-way competitions at my then home dz in Boise, Idaho. At that time you had to build a right-side-up formation, then turn it upside down. Repeat for more points. The competitions went on for several years, and perhaps the rules evolved. I just checked my logbook and I have a 6-way star, to a 6-way donut, to a 6-way upside down donut in 1979. I don't have the earlier stuff convenient to look up earlier 4-way. -- Jeff My Skydiving History Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites