Skydiving
Parachutes
The most important item you can have when jumping out of an
airplane is, hands down skydiving parachutes.
The second is, of course your lucky rabbit’s foot. It is a
good thing the powers that be dubbed bunnies lucky and not a
hog or cow. That moo hoof would be a tad heavy around your
neck. And people might stare. However, instead of sitting
around rubbing the hair off a dead animal’s severed foot,
please pay close attention to what your instructor is saying
and demonstrating. 
There are only a few classes before your first live action
trip, soaring through that bright blue sky. No going for a bird
either. You are moving way too fast, and that frightening blue
jay is going to have you covered in white stuff. Do not even
think for a second that you can snag a hawk. That is not a good
plan; go back to your bunny’s foot.
You may be a little curious how skydiving parachutes
function. This is some good information to have knowledge of.
You should want to know all about the equipment you are
trusting your life to before you bail out of the back of an
airplane.
The Styles and Trends
Of Skydiving Parachutes
In the fashion world, a simple black dress can be designed
one hundred different ways by one hundred different designers.
The funny part? Of those one hundred creations, seventy-five
will basically look alike. Thanks to the skydiving gods that
parachutes have only two basic designs: the pure drag type and
the lift-producing type.
The first one of the skydiving parachutes, the drag, is
traditionally shaped like a half globe. So how do you stay in
the air? It produces a vertical drag force that works against
the direction the payload is traveling. In the case of
skydiving, the parachute is working against the pull of
gravity. You float back down to earth instead of fall. And you
live.
The second type of chute, the lift-producing , have a box
shape to them. They function much like the wing of a plane,
producing both lift and drag at the same time. Air flowing over
the top is moving faster than the air passing under the
parachute. This is known as airfoil. You would sink down on a
diagonal angle. And once again, you live. No matter which
chute, the icing is the same.
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