Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Posting-Version: version B 2.10.1 6/24/83; site utastro.UUCP Path: utzoo!watmath!clyde!burl!ulysses!harpo!seismo!ut-sally!utastro!gary From: gary@utastro.UUCP (Gary Hansen) Newsgroups: net.rec.skydive Subject: 90way Message-ID: <233@utastro.UUCP> Date: Thu, 3-May-84 16:27:49 EDT Article-I.D.: utastro.233 Posted: Thu May 3 16:27:49 1984 Date-Received: Sat, 5-May-84 01:16:27 EDT Organization: UTexas Astronomy Dept., Austin, Texas Lines: 58 >>> This line intentionally left blank <<< I went to Deland Florida for the Easter Boogie and found the experience spectacular. The program evolved around multi-level scrambles with free-fall video on every jump. About 200 people entered. The first day started with 9-way sequential. At the end of the day the team captains reviewed the video and recommended the appropriate people for the 12-way teams for the following day. All those whose performance or experience level was not good enough for 12-way continued with 9-way the following day. This allowed everyone from the humblest zoomie to the most renown sky-god to team up with a group of people with similar skydiving skills. The scrambles continued with 16, 24, and 36-way sequential on the following days, with each individual finding his appropriate nitch. The 24-way hexa-diamond base for the 90-way was selected and the two 36-way sequential teams each swooped it for 60-way attempts. The first 60-way attempt only built to about 45-50, but the second one built cleanly to 60. The 90-way was attempted 4 times over two days. The first attempt yielded 84. The second was poor, we spent to much time at altitude before the jump, with the assorted problems that that produces, it only built to 75 or so. The following day spirits ran high. The third attempt yielded a clean 87, one person went low, and someone else over-amped, Z'd out and took out someone else who was in the process of docking. It's very freaky to be out of a formation that large and feel that you may not have time to dock before break-off. I can see how someone could over-amp under the circumstances, thinking of the infamy of being out with 89 people in and all the video and still photograpers on the load. Then finally on the fourth attempt the 90-way was completed. It lasted 2.8 seconds. We missed the 3 second FAI official world record by a measly .2 seconds. The first grip to break was in the interior of the formation, a grip ripped off of one of the jump suits about the third row out. I see this skydive as a world record although un-official. Some of the other participants were bitterly disappointed because of the lack of official status. I was disappointed to, but the creation of "THE 90-WAY" was what I was primarily interested in, the "official" world record status was secondary. There were six free-fall photographers on the load, so there should be some outstanding photographs published in the next month or two. I guess that depends upon how important the "officialness" of the record is to the assorted publishers. Mike Truffer of Skydive Magazine was on the load so I would expect good coverage by his publication. During the fun dives on a windy day, 25-35mph, a video man had his AOD fire @7000. He was under a round reserve and landed in a swamp more than 5 miles away. When he got to about 1500' he turned his VCR back on and got a spectacular landing sequence in a swampy forrest. The first view showed 30-40 foot pine trees with swampy boggs below them as for as you could see. Then as the ground approached you could see no clear landing area, the best shot was between a couple of large trees with interwoven branches. The branches came into the foreground and brushed by followed by a splash. Too bad no audio. The guy was not injured but he was very inconvenienced. Another interesting incident was a collision between a guy in free-fall and a deploying canopy. He fell right through the canopy, tearing it in two at the center cell, and then deployed his main. The guy under the destroyed canopy cut the shreds away (they came down in two pieces) and deployed his reserve. I spoke with the guy who hit the canopy about 30 minutes later and found that he was not injured at all. I was surprised, he didn't even have any line burns. Gary Hansen D7703