Alborne

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About Alborne

  • Birthday 06/16/1963

Gear

  • Container Other
    Javelin
  • Main Canopy Size
    168
  • Main Canopy Other
    Pilot
  • Reserve Canopy Size
    PDR176
  • AAD
    Cypres 2

Jump Profile

  • Home DZ
    Mid America Sport Parachute Center
  • License
    A
  • Number of Jumps
    350
  • Years in Sport
    31
  • First Choice Discipline
    RW
  • First Choice Discipline Jump Total
    350
  • Freefall Photographer
    No

Ratings and Rigging

  • USPA Coach
    No
  • Pro Rating
    No
  • Wingsuit Instructor
    No

Recent Profile Visitors

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  1. Thanks for the help I’m ordering one.
  2. What if the politician’s are the boobies
  3. So you’ve been jumping that wedge one for ten years without any issues. The Velcro holds up okay.
  4. Yes mine is still on my chest strap and I’m thinking on moving it not sure weather to go soft or ridged.
  5. I’m 61 and thought I was getting old but at 84 you make me feel like a kid. I’m jumping a Pilot 168 and the openings are great and it is fun to fly but it doesn’t flare like a PD canopy. It flies very flat and takes a little getting used to to be accurate on landings. I like the canopy but if you’re used to a PD you might think the flare is weak. I haven’t jumped one but you might look at the Storm. It should pack a little smaller since it’s a 7 cell they say the openings are great and flare is strong.
  6. What are your thoughts on mud flap altimeter mounts? What’s going to happen if I face plant on landing? I think some of them are soft do they stay in place? Any recommendations?
  7. We still do 4 way but the people I jump with are all around 60 years old. It seems that the younger jumpers enjoy different disciplines like sit flying and tracking which is fine I’d probably like them too if I tried them, but it’s hard to teach an old dog.
  8. Alborne

    Vigil

    Does anyone know about how much it cost to have the ten year maintenance done on a Vigil
  9. Is maintenance on the newer cypres voluntary? If so what’s your opinion on forgoing the 5 and 10 year maintenance cycles?
  10. Thanks for the input, sounds like good advice. I am planning on switching to the Pilot 150 once the season gets to rolling again this spring but was just wondering if I could just go straight to the Zulu. I already have the Pilot I guess I should just stick to the plan.
  11. How big of a step is it from a Pilot 168 to a Zulu 152. Should I jump a Pilot 150 for a while before moving to a fully elliptical. I have about 500 jumps but most of them or on a seven cell. I’m not a great canopy pilot but for some reason I want to get to a Zulu.
  12. Just seeking opinions on which is best overall canopy. Preferably from people who have jumped both.
  13. Are the hybrid canopy’s worth it? I know the small pack volume and easy packing sound attractive but do they pressurize adequately? Are they rigid enough? Are they only for light wing loading? And what about Areodyne’s ZXP fabric, is it really easier to pack?
  14. Can you hear the alarm in freefall if you are wearing it on your wrist
  15. Wow this topic really hits close to home. I quit for twenty years while I raised my kids, but I never stopped thinking about the sky. This year my youngest started college so I decided to start jumping again. I still love it ! Can’t believe I ever stopped really, but one thing I’ve learned in the 57 years I’ve been on this rock is that life is not always about me. There’s nothing more important than raising your kids, love them, love them, love them. But there is more to raising kids than protecting them. Self preservation is natural, and they’ll figure that out on their own. Knowing how to live is a bit trickier, and I have a feeling that’s where your parenting skills will soar. Skydiving is a gift, and you know that, don’t hide it from your kids just to keep them safe. It’s better to teach them how to be safe in a dangerous world, than to hide from it. Didn’t mean to get so deep, but don’t want you to make the same mistakes that I did. What I did want to say is when you’re ready the sport will welcome you back with open arms, they did me. It has changed a lot. They’re both better and safer than we were. They talk more about packing, and landings, and flight patterns, and they’re better because of it. You will need new gear though, they laughed at my old five cell swift reserve, and it was state of the art when I got it. The gear is better, and the training is better. These kids are doing amazing things in the air, the sport is progressing nicely. But belly flying is still about the same, and they still make canopies that go slower when they’re open than when they’re packed, so don’t be intimidated by the changes. But don’t wait too long, a happy parent is better than a grumpy one.