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2023 TBS World Record event, exit frame of 108-way, image by author Mark ‘Trunk’ Kirschenbaum

Big-way Bites 13: Cameraflying

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Filming Big-ways and Records, by Trunk…

Arizona Airspeed Skills Camp, March 2024
Image by author Mark ‘Trunk’ Kirschenbaum

After filming a bigway skydiving record at the end of last year, I realized many of the techniques and methods we used are not documented anywhere. Some of these are my own, whereas others have been passed down from the masters. Although these techniques were used for a belly formation, they are basically the same for vertical formations. 

It is imperative that videographers are knowledgeable with bigway formations before they film one. It’s highly recommended to be a participant, or at least sit in on a few debriefs before just “sending it.”

Remember: One mistake can have deadly repercussions

The purpose of this article is as a resource to newer big-way videographers. This is the culmination of what I’ve learned filming both belly and vertical formations. 

Exit frame of a 76-way from the right-right trail aircraft
Image by author Mark ‘Trunk’ Kirschenbaum

Terminology

As a refresher: 

  • Floaters are the first ones out of the plane and they float, or track up, to the formation. There are typically many more floaters in vertical formations than belly formations.
  • First row divers or “in the door” are the people somewhere in the middle.
    Divers are the last ones out of the plane and they dive down to the formation.
  • Flivers are people who float up too far and become a diver. This is extremely dangerous as it’s blind to those who are diving. (Mainly a freeflyer term)
  • Stadium: the tiered setup to approach to approaching the skydive. Basically, one unit up for every one unit back you are from the formation. You can see in this image, most people are in the stadium apart from the person on the bottom right. 
The “stadium” of the formation building
Image by Mark ‘Trunk’ Kirschenbaum

Your job

As the videographer, you are an active participant. It’s your job to safely capture the formation without creating any undue stress on its participants or organizers. You’re an important part of the team and therefore your job isn’t only capturing the formation, but filling any gaps required to make the event a success. We have a unique vantage point, so bring up any safety concerns to the organizers when seen. 

I like to find out exactly what the organizers want for the various views and angles. These needs typically change throughout the camp so it’s best to keep an ear open during the debrief for changes. During the warm-up jumps, typically the organizers focus on the approach and the stadium view. 

Formation plane naming conventions
Image by author Mark ‘Trunk’ Kirschenbaum

During actual record attempts the organizers focus more on the on the build-up and timing of the participants exiting the plane. Typically, the videographer in the lead plane will focus on the base, and the other videographers will focus on the exits and maybe a slightly back and flat during the initial build.

For record attempts you need to see all the grips so steep views are better. For artsy shots, on-level or flatter angles show depth.  

Flatter view where grips don’t need to be seen. This view shows more depth on bigger formations but it’s not judgeable. Image by author Mark ‘Trunk’ Kirschenbaum

Deliverables

Before the event I like to communicate my deliverables and when/how the media will be pushed to participants. I highly recommend getting media out as fast as possible, so participants don’t record the screens with their phones. Facebook is a common portal for event photos and Google Drive / Dropbox work well for video. Link sites like linktree work well as an intermediary, so participants aren’t looking everywhere. Similarly, you can create a page on your website like I do with ultrastoked.com 

Don’t hide during the briefing, it’s beneficial to listen to the briefing
Image by author Mark ‘Trunk’ Kirschenbaum

Recently, I like posting short reels and stories as they get more traction with less work than an event video. But be sure to spell out and charge appropriately if a full edit is expected. Remember, this is typically another full day or two of work. 

Copyright and ownership are good discussions to have with the organizer. Generally, the photographer owns all copyright. Therefore, explicit permission needs to be obtained by anyone using the images or video for commercial purposes. Yes, this means even for the participant’s sponsorships, hometown articles, or commercial blog posts. 

For the past few years, low resolution video and photos are distributed online. Remind participants these images are for personal use only, and not for print. Participants can reach out to the individual videographer for prints and commercial releases.  

The last note I would give is, the organizers may confide in you about problem participants. It is not your job to divulge this information and it’s imperative that you keep this to yourself. 

My goal at each of these events is “don’t be that guy.”
That typically keeps me out of trouble.  

Illinois

Images by author Mark ‘Trunk’ Kirschenbaum

The formation

Don’t hide during the briefing. Each organizing team is different so it’s beneficial to listen to his or her briefing.

Learn the formation and where you and the fellow videographers will be flying. For this formation (above and below), at first we thought the 3 o’clock and 9 o’clock positions would be better. However, after some warm-up jumps, we adapted our positions for better photos. Generally, each videographer is assigned a quadrant, sector, or a hemisphere. Since we are focused on the formation, and all flying at roughly the same altitude, maintaining your assigned location is imperative

Exits and the approach

If I’m on the lead plane, I immediately set up right above the base and start recording the build. In this particular formation, I would go to 5 or 7 o’clock off the hill. This is so I wouldn’t get burbled out too much while still holding tight on the formation. 

For the other planes I would stay on the floater side and transition if necessary due to sun or another flyer taking primary on that quadrant. This needs to be communicated to other videographers and participants. 

As far as trail plane exits are concerned, check with the organizers. It’s a bit cleaner to leave with the first row divers but you miss the floaters’ approaches. Sliding down the fuselage generally keeps you out of harm’s way as everyone’s timing is different. 

Right, right trail exit, cameraflyer sliding down the fuselage as a floater
Image by author Mark ‘Trunk’ Kirschenbaum

Transitions

The most dangerous movement a videographer can do is transition from the floating side of the formation to the diving side. Sometimes due to sun or just the formation itself we have to make this transition. If this is necessary, you must pay close attention during the dirt-dive and exit frame in particular. Note the jumpsuit and helmet colors of all the people you will pass.

If you are leaving from an outside-outside plane (example: right, right trail) you can slide back and around the last diver. This will make for a really wide shot of the stadium but is sometimes necessary. Once you get visual confirmation of the last divers, set up to the steep angle on the diver side. I like to communicate to the participants during the dirtdive my route while wearing my wings, so they are aware of the movement. 

The other option is do the transition in stages; stay steep on the floater side and wait for mid-plane people to get into the stadium. Move to the middle, then wait for the divers to be in your peripheral and move to the top. 

Video: 2-Point 76-Way IL State Record 

Total Break Sequential, All American Big WaysVideo by Trunk

In the above video I’m on the left trail plane. On exit, I immediately pop up and go to about 7 o’clock and wait for the divers to get into the stadium. The 5 o’clock is occupied by the lead plane’s videographer. You can see when the diver side is accounted for, I make the transition.

Oxygen and in the plane

Videographers typically have a lot on their plate before exit. I’ll go through some workflows that I have found helpful. This enables me not to (stares into camera 😉) Get Hypoxic so I can reliably get the shot each time. As you probably know, staying hydrated is essential.  Also, since everyone is counting on you, minimizing partying and smoking is highly recommended.

Leave the oxygen hose attached and let it detach itself on exit (having figured out your O2 hose connection points to be sure they detach in the right place!)
  1. Cannulas are now required from the FAA in the US. I wear mine under a buff before putting my helmet on. If you’re not getting oxygen, also check that the hose is not cut off under your mud flap. Be sure to not route it around your neck as some cannulas are very strong and can become a noose. 
    Note: An “Ok” sign is preferred rather than a thumbs-up. A thumbs-up is reserved for more. 
  2. I personally route the cannula tube down the sleeve closest where I’ll be standing with the door open. I want to have it connected after I open the door and ready to climb out. I know I’ve just exerted a bunch of energy getting the door open and about to climbing onto the step. 
  3. Do a full gear and camera check at 10,000 feet and sign it off. 
    I found pointing and verbally confirming
     at critical items like my “M” manual dial on my camera and the lens cap prevents me from second-guessing them on exit.
  4. Minimize moving and talking after 10,000 feet! 
  5. I put my camera helmet on about a minute before the 2-minute call (three minutes out). This allows me to go slowly, and methodically get everything in place without people encroaching on my space. Move slowly and maintain your blood oxygen level. I do test the oxygen out once I put my helmet on by passing the canula over my wetted lips and feeling for air. If it does get kinked by my helmet, I’m ready to go directly from the hose. 
  6. Using the BLU2Pro for feedback, I turn my cameras onto standby at the 2-minute call. I then put my ringsight close to my eye, but not over it so I can clear my goggles, but don’t forget about it on the jump.
     I take a few shots on my still camera to ensure it’s on. I also perform handle touches, confirm wing attachment points one more time, and clean up the swoop cords on my wings. 
  7. On the door signal, I open the door and start recording on my backup and vertical video cameras. I’ll start any in-plane cameras and lock my ringsight into place. Additionally, I once more quickly go over my freefall checklist: my exit, the approach, sectors I need to watch for, and breakoff sequence. 
  8. On the green light, I press record on my primary camera and verify all three are recording. I do peek out, but there is honestly little we can do about the spot. Ground is generally in control on these multiple plane run-ins.   
  9. On climb-out I generally just let the oxygen detach itself, ensuring it’s nowhere near anyone else’s gear. We have a ton going on and will exert energy getting out on the camera step. Therefore, I keep it connected until the very last moment.
  10. On bigways you are absolutely an active participant on this skydive. Mentally review everything a few times during your climb to altitude. Visualize your climb-out, exit timing, flow during the dive, who you need to wait on until you transition, and breakoff/deployment. If landing direction is predetermined, remind yourself that too. 

It’s imperative to follow the breakoff plan and agreed deployment altitudes
Image by author Mark ‘Trunk’ Kirschenbaum

Break-off and deployment

When multiple videographers are sharing the sky, it’s imperative that breakoff altitudes are clearly defined and followed. Be an active participant during the dirt-dive with the other videographers and move through your plan. Generally, the underneath videographer takes it down to the last breakoff wave. We work the breakoff altitudes backwards from there. 

For those deploying during a breakoff wave many of us backslide slightly away from the center, turning 180 degrees from center, and then deploy. Always maintaining our positive altitude above the formation while deploying! This method enables debriefing of your sector’s tracking group and makes it likely you’ll open up pointed away from other videographers. 

For vertical formations remember to take a moment and slow down before deploying!

Don’t delay, cut away!

As a videographer, you’re in very precarious spot if you were to have a malfunction. The rule of thumb for bigways is if anything is wrong with your canopy, immediately cutaway and fire your reserve. You don’t want to be flying diving line twists through the trackers.

Personally, if I open high, I hang in brakes by using the pinning technique. I figure I might as well let everyone else sort it out below. This generally gives me a clear area to land right by the entrance. If I open up on the last wave, I do my best to join the other similarly-loaded canopies.

There is a lot going on once the canopy deploys. Be fast and efficient turning off your cameras, unhooking your wings, stowing your slider, and firing your brakes. Keep looking up and around. If you are slow tidying up, perhaps bigways aren’t for you – yet. 

Tracking group builds during breakoff

Debriefing

Quickly get the trimmed and named footage to the organizers. Most of the time I’m running so no-one is waiting on me. Remember it’s the organizers’ job to debrief the participants, so generally keep any observations to the organizing team. 

Freefall gear and tools 

This should not have to be said, but you must have a very tidy, freefly-friendly rig.  As always, be on the lookout for poorly packed pilot chutes and other equipment safety hazards. Keep your eyes open to anything flapping during the skydive. 

As far as computer software: I love using Adobe Lightroom to quickly edit and watermark photos while the organizers are debriefing. Everyone wants to share the formation’s photos right away so any tool you can use to streamline the process is helpful. 

For PCs I use the free tool Avidemux to rapidly trim footage without reencoding. Just be sure to set the output to MP4. For Macs use Quicktime’s Trim feature. I’m told GoPro Player quickly transcodes media if you need to down convert the footage for debriefing purposes.

Photo of my setup by the master, Mike McGowan

Camera equipment

For your camera helmet, I obviously recommend the BLU2Pro Indicator for GoPro Cameras. Having that feedback alleviates a lot of my anxiety. In fact, that is why I’ve been designing indicators for years. I don’t trust a small mirror or someone who may be a bit hypoxic to know I’m recording in the right mode on a critical jump. Plus, it is nice to confirm while on the camera step.  

A ringsight is definitely needed for bigger formations. This is especially true for framing the base in the bottom of the frame while capturing the divers from the other planes. Of course, I recommend the Brent Concentric Ringsights as we’ve been building them for the past decade and half. 

Summary

I hope this provided a solid resource for videographers starting to film formations. As we time out, and new blood comes in, it’s important that we as a community share this information. Hopefully some of you who are reading this will join us in the near future! 

Please consider Hypoxic for your camera needs. Our products are available here or from our various awesome dealers.

Acknowledgements

Thank you to Elliot Byrd, Mike McGowan, Jason Peters, Steve Curtis, Joe Jennings, Charlie McGee, Craig O’Brien, Norman Kent, T-Buff, and other awesome flyers for sharing their knowledge throughout the years.

Article originally published on the GetHypoxic website here


Big-way Bites Series

Image over Skydive Hibaldstow, by Martin Skrbl

Check out other articles in this series covering the essentials of large formation skydiving.

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Meet: Mark Trunk Kirschenbaum

If you’ve ever picked up a Parachutist or spent a time on social media, you have run across Trunk’s photography. He has spent the last 18 years traveling from boogie to boogie capturing skydivers’ smiles in freefall. When he is not shooting events or camps, Trunk owns and operates Hypoxic; a manufacturer of camera gear for human flight. Beyond the lens, Trunk is a wealth of information on cameraflying and is always willing to lend a hand.

Be sure to follow him on Instagram @gethypoxic or follow HypoxicTrunk on Facebook. If cameraflying interests you, check out his blog at gethypoxic.com 

Trunk is sponsored by UPT, PD, LB, SSK, Liquid Sky Sports, Cookie, and of course himself - Hypoxic.

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