THE FASTEST WAY OUT OF LINE TWISTS
Flight-1 share an alternative method of unravelling line twists. It’s important to have a fast, efficient method to resolve line twists – remember this issue doesn’t only occur with a main deployment. So just in case your reserve opens with twists, know how to get rid of them as quickly as possible.
Check how quick and simple the process is in this video:
Most skydivers will have experienced or are going to experience line twists after deployment. There are a number of factors that could cause them; here are a few suggestions from my colleague Pete Allum:
POTENTIAL CAUSES
‘Let’s look at the various ways that your parachute can get itself into this condition;
Equipment
- Is your harness tightened symmetrically?
- Are your pilot chute and kill-line effective? (check with your rigger)
- Are your line stows effective and are your lines in decent trim (is your canopy due a re-line)?
- Are you packing according to the manufacturer’s recommendations?
- Can you keep the canopy relatively straight as you stuff it into the deployment bag?
Body position on opening
- Is your body level on deployment, are your hands, shoulders and hips all lined up with the horizon and are you looking straight forward during the pilot chute release?
- Do you fly through your deployment keeping your body, from toes to head symmetrical, as you are pulled upright?
- Do you keep your hands away from or very lightly on your risers during deployment?”
JT deals with 2 sets of line twists
DEALING WITH LINE TWISTS
For complete clarity, we want to start this section with a clear statement that always applies:
IMPORTANT: ALTITUDE IS KING.
If you reach your decision altitude and you still don’t know if you have a good canopy that you can control and steer, it’s time to get rid of it.
Nothing supersedes this in any circumstance. The purpose of this article is to give you an alternative way of resolving line twists only, you should still respect your own safety standards.
If you deploy, look up, and see that you have line twists to deal with, here’s some suggestions on how to proceed.
- Push your risers together and CHECK YOUR ALTITUDE! Are you above your decision altitude? Do you have altitude to try to resolve the situation?
- If you do, are the twists in the lines or the risers?
- TWISTS IN LINES: Turn the risers with both hands in the SAME direction as the twists until the twists have moved down into the risers.
- TWISTS IN RISERS: If or once the twists are in the risers, you can reach up above the twists to the risers and pull your body round in the opposite direction to allow your body’s rotation to unravel those twists.
- CHECK YOUR ALTITUDE
- Perform a canopy control check and check your airspace.
Line Twist Solution, step by step
SPINNING LINE TWISTS
If your system (you and your canopy) is turning during this process here are a few tips to help stop the turn;
1. When you first push the risers together you may be able to spot any offset in the risers, creating asymmetrical inputs. It might be possible to bring the risers back into a symmetrical alignment by just pulling on the one furthest away.
2. It is also possible to stop a turn once the twists are in the risers by reaching up above the twists and steering out of the turn using the opposite rear riser to the direction of the turn – if you are turning to the right, grab the left rear riser above the twists and pull. NOTE: your canopy is steerable even when you have twists in the risers.
CAUTION
- Remain altitude aware throughout the process.
- If your system is spinning and you begin to feel dizzy, cut away.
- If you are unable to twist the risers due to too much tension/lack of grip strength/other, cut away.
- If at any point during this process you reach your decision altitude, and you still don’t have a steerable canopy, cut away.
- Always follow your own safety standards
Pablo Hernandez deals with spinning line twists
What’s going on?
What is happening during this process and why is this method so fast and effective?
PULL vs PUSH
In order to unravel a twist we need rotation. Pulling on risers with twists in the lines does not create any rotation. At worst, if there is any existing offset in the risers then you are potentially pulling asymmetrically on the canopy and may worsen or induce a turn. Pushing the risers together at least takes the tension off the twists to minimize any such input.
TWISTS IN THE LINES VS RISERS
Compare your system to being on a swing. You are a suspended heavy weight sitting on a wooden seat (harness) attached by chains (risers) to an A frame (canopy). Remember what is was like to twist the chains up by rotating under that swing… then lifting your legs up? As the chains are set apart from each other on the A frame there is enough torque (rotational force) for your body to rotate freely until all the twists in the chain unravel. That is the goal of moving the twists down from the lines into the risers – there will be enough torque for you to start the rotation of your body to unravel the twists from the risers. Very little torque exists when the twists are all the way up in the lines, which is why it can be time consuming to try to kick out from twists in the lines.
OTHER RECOMMENDATIONS
Understanding the rate at which you lose altitude with your system is a key factor to understanding whether you have enough altitude to try to resolve a nuisance factor such as line twists. For example if you know it takes your system 5 complete rotations from an aggressive toggle turn to lose 500 ft, then you have a good guesstimate of the amount of altitude you may lose with a tension knot, a toggle fire or indeed spinning from line twists.
Wearing a digital altimeter on the inside of your wrist will allow you to try to deal with nuisance factors AND see your altitude throughout the process.
SUMMARY
One last time: Altitude is king and respect your own safety standards. And if both those factors allow, do what you can to resolve line twists with an effective, well thought-out plan of action. Good luck!
Twists and a trapped line
Altitude Awareness
Note: These videos are hop and pops with deployment altitudes above 5,000 feet, giving the pilots more altitude than most standard freefall jumps to fix problems before reaching their decision altitude. From a 3,000 feet deployment there would be far less altitude to work in – have a decision altitude, know how much altitude it takes for your system to fully deploy and be aware of the size of your own expected window of opportunity.
Related article: Loss of Altitude
Method and videos by Flight-1, article by Maxine Tate