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Skydiving Wind Tunnels

Skydiving - The Great Airborne Skydiving Adventure!
By Dorothy Santoro

When I was 18, my dad was finishing up his hours to get his private pilots license. At the time, being 18 and feeling like nothing could ever happen to me, I felt I would have a lot of fun if I took up the sport of skydiving, a real adrenaline rush.

Back then the thought of jumping out of a plane at anywhere from 10, 000-18, 000 feet , and flying through the air at 120-180 mph, seemed like a perfectly reasonable activity. Keep in mind, I was only 18, and I have no doubt that my parents had no intention of allowing me to do that, they just had not told me no yet.

My dad died of a heart attack, not related to flying, the next year and I just never got around to taking up skydiving after that. But I still, after all these years, feel a thrill when I watch someone jump out of a plane. After watching George Bush (senior) go skydiving on his 80th birthday, I feel there may still be time for me.

Going to skydiving classes has been on my mind recently, once again. I no longer have little kids, my youngest is now 22, so I don’t have to worry about him. Now I think it may be my time. A little adrenaline rush may be just what I need. And I can’t think of a better way to get it.

You jump out of that plane, pull your pilot chute and hope it deploys your main canopy, and if it doesn’t, you just pull the cutaway handle and open your reserve chute. No problem. Then as your gliding across the landscape at around 50 mph, looking for the dropzone, you drop down right on target. Talk about an adrenaline rush. I can just imagine how it would feel.

Going to class is the first step. Depending on the type of skydiving you want to do - Tandem, Static Line, AFF (accelerated free fall) - you may spend anywhere from an hour to eight hours listening and watching. There is a lot of complex gear and you need to know how to use it safely.

Learning basic physics about how the body and parachute work together in the air at high speeds, learning how to track, how to work a drogue and how to use an altimeter are all things you need to know, in addition to the AAD (automatic activation device).

There are other freeflying techniques, beyond the basics, that you will want to explore to get the most out of this high flying sport called skydiving. Modern skydiving is a little more complicated then back in the day when I first became interested in jumping out of planes. Canopy manipulation is more like paragliding today, as opposed to the old round chute, come down, land and roll back in the day.

Getting more advanced skills means that you will need to learn about the possibility of turbulence, canopy collapse, mid-air collisions and other potential hazards. Even if the risks of skydiving are relatively low, you need to learn as much as you possibly can to make it as safe as you can.

If you want to have the experience of a lifetime, we may meet up in the air, jumping out of a plane, enjoying an exhilarating experience together.

Outdoor Sports are something that will keep you active and young. Extreme sports like Skydiving are definitely an adrenaline rush.

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It must be time to go to Beds - The Sun

2 Jan 2009 at 6:19pm 

The Sun

It must be time to go to Beds
The Sun, UK - Jan 2, 2009
The place has the country?s largest upward wind tunnel and is used for training by the Great Britain sky diving team. Luckily, they let idiots like me use ...


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Diving into action - Motorsport.com

23 Dec 2008 at 12:45pm 

Diving into action
Motorsport.com, Florida - Dec 23, 2008
They were practicing for the big national skydiving meet, and they told us that 30 minutes in the wind tunnel is the same as 30 jumps. ...


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Now that's what you call having a ball - Telegraph.co.uk

23 Dec 2008 at 1:13am 

Telegraph.co.uk

Now that's what you call having a ball
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Dec 22, 2008
If you've ever flipped headfirst over your skis, then ricocheting around inside a vertical wind tunnel in an AirSphere will give you flashbacks. ...


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12 days of Christmas blagging: Win a chance to fly in the Airkix ... - Sunday...

18 Dec 2008 at 1:50am 

Sunday Mirror

12 days of Christmas blagging: Win a chance to fly in the Airkix ...
Sunday Mirror, UK - Dec 17, 2008
Your flight in Airkix?s £3m wind tunnel, borne aloft in a 12ft chamber by 80kw of power from four giant motors, will be one of the most exhilarating ...


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For gift that lasts, give special experience - Arizona Republic

15 Dec 2008 at 7:50pm 

For gift that lasts, give special experience
Arizona Republic, AZ - Dec 15, 2008
Skydiving (earthbound): Not far from the Eloy runway, Skyventure Arizona offers skydiving without the plummeting. Instead you soar in a wind tunnel, ...


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Wind tunnel entrepreneur flying high - Telegraph.co.uk

12 Dec 2008 at 11:17am 

Telegraph.co.uk

Wind tunnel entrepreneur flying high
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Dec 12, 2008
... felt somewhat ambivalent about the whole skydiving experience, but what made it click for him was a visit to Orlando's skydiving simulation wind tunnel. ...


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10 most travel-inspiring movies of 2008 - MSNBC

11 Dec 2008 at 10:38am 

10 most travel-inspiring movies of 2008
MSNBC - Dec 11, 2008
The scene was actually filmed in Bedford, England, at Bodyflight, a skydiving center with a wind tunnel that simulates free-falling at 120 mph ...


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