dudeman17

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dudeman17 last won the day on February 20

dudeman17 had the most liked content!

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Jump Profile

  • Home DZ
    noybdz
  • License
    D
  • Licensing Organization
    uspa
  • Number of Jumps
    17
  • Years in Sport
    45
  • Freefall Photographer
    No

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  • AFF
    Instructor
  • Tandem
    Instructor
  • USPA Coach
    No
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    No
  • Wingsuit Instructor
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  1. A lot of this is why I mentioned USPA in the other thread. They already host and maintain a website, would it be that hard/costly for them to run this one?
  2. Just an update/confirmation on this: In the current issue of Parachutist the Profile is of Miles Daisher, who was one of Cruise's base coaches on this stunt. In the article he mentions making test jumps on the MARD system. So, yeah.
  3. Well that's kind of the point. I don't see anyone buying the site as a business investment for the reasons you state. So maybe when it's about to just die, they could grab it on the cheap and just maintain it as a service to jumpers.
  4. Hmmm... I wonder what the chances would be of getting Chuck Akers to get USPA to take over this site... and then leave it alone?
  5. So are we going to see this video before this site shuts down? ----------------- That guy behind him over his shoulder in the sunglasses looks mighty suspicious. That wouldn't be Cooper, would it?
  6. dudeman17

    Trust Fund

    Well, if you were a trust fund baby, where would you be?!
  7. Any idea of when it will go offline? Any chance of someone buying it and keeping it going?
  8. Thanks. I think that's the second time I've asked that, and yours was the only reply so far. I wonder what the 'other issues' were. I wouldn't be defending the guy at all, but I'm curious whether the suspension was clerical, or how egregiously bad his courses might have been.
  9. Yes it was, and I spit-take laughed out loud, partially because I couldn't believe they actually did that. Come on, you two both came up in the BSBD era, is grim humor that out of favor these days?
  10. Is that because the TSO requires it, or is there a functional advantage?
  11. That's it right there. Ask and ask and ask and they're just going to say no, and then what. A way lotta years ago a couple of us looked into the ACLU and other similar groups and got no results because we don't represent very many people or some cause. I even handed a videotape and a letter to Gerry Spence once at a book signing, but no response. I think the process is, you apply for a permit and get denied, you appeal that and get denied again, then you can sue above them for a court order. But that would be prohibitively expensive. It would literally take someone like Tom Cruise or Red Bull who would have the interest, the funds, and the platform to make it happen.
  12. I may have posted this story before but I am reminded of it again. Many years ago when I was jumping at Taft, somebody had a cutaway and their canopy came down next to a road. Some local guy driving by saw it, stopped, looked around and tentatively lifted the canopy up to see if there was a body underneath it. When he saw that there wasn't, he gathered it up and brought it back to the airport. His curiosity got the better of him, and he went up on a tandem that day. He liked it, and came back a few days later for AFF. Long story short, he became a regular jumper, and even a TI!
  13. It's not like you're 25, trying to be one of the cool kids with a tight rig getting ready for the next freefly or angle jump that ends with a swoop. You're an older jumper getting back into the sport you clearly still love, wanting to have some fun in your golden years. You'll look far more cool in the loading area with a big grin and a maybe slightly larger rig, than you would lurking around with a cast on your leg. I can think of a scenario where a larger rig may cause an issue, and that is if you decide to revive one of your old favorites and start a ten-man speed star team. A larger rig doesn't really fit into the tight line-up required. But hey, that's your ready excuse to insist that you have to go last! Ha!
  14. Why are you fixated on that container size? Did you already buy that? If so, why did you do that before deciding on your canopy? Container size is cosmetic, vanity. Canopy size and performance is safety, survival. Choose wisely.
  15. It's not just the number of jumps, it's how you perform on them and where your skill set is when you complete them. Don't be in a hurry. Yes, but that's better done live at the dz with instructors who are familiar with the student. Hopefully the OP has or will do that as well. For such people, bowling comes to mind.