Bryan Cotton wrote:There the big lesson was muscle memory- open the window or door first, get a reference to the exit with one hand, release the seatbelt with the other, and swim out. It makes sense, if you fly acro, to dry run the steps of canopy release, seatbelt release, exit, and pull. As far as being willing to get out, I think if you really break it you will be motivated.
gcm52 wrote:For those who are using parachutes either in a sailplane or during aerobatics, did you get training doing parachute jumps? I am wondering how it would go with your very first jump being out of an airplane in an emergency.
gcm52 wrote:For those who are using parachutes either in a sailplane or during aerobatics, did you get training doing parachute jumps? I am wondering how it would go with your very first jump being out of an airplane in an emergency.
That's true--once you are out and under the canopy, Newton is doing most of the driving. The USAF spends minimal time in training pilots in parachute landing falls (PLFs)--they really don't want to break a pilot trainee, so it's not like Army Airborne training. But the main value of experiencing it is so the person will not hesitate when it is time to go. But, as you say, that's probably not a problem in a plane that has suffered an inflight catastrophe. Under a typical round 'chute, the impact itself is about like jumping off the roof of a house--and most of us have done that (maybe a few decades ago--when Mom wasn't looking)fastj22 wrote:gcm52 wrote:I don't think you need any training to make an emergency jump except how to pull the rip cord and how to wear the chute.
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