I believe it's just PA parachutes Ross.

 

John

 

From: Ross McLean [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Saturday, 23 April 2016 5:38 PM
To: 'Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia.'; 'Ron Sanders'; 
[email protected]
Subject: RE: [Aus-soaring] [gfaforum] Parachute lives

 

Does that only apply to PA parachutes then or is it a GFA mandated requirement?

ROSS

_________________________________________________________________________________________
 

 

From: Aus-soaring [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
John Parncutt
Sent: Saturday, 23 April 2016 4:53 PM
To: 'Ron Sanders'; [email protected]; 'Discussion of issues 
relating to Soaring in Australia.'
Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] [gfaforum] Parachute lives

 

As I understand it Parachutes Australia have placed a 20 year life on the 
harness, due to concerns over UV exposure and the difficulty in measuring the 
effect it has had on a particular harness.

 

My own parachute was manufactured in the mid 1980's and is assessed at each 
repack, whereas the harness is about 8 years old with another 12 years to run 
before mandatory replacement.

 

I'm assuming nothing has changed with PA's policy since I updated the harness?

 

John Parncutt

Melbourne Gliding Club (VMFG)

 

From: Ron Sanders [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Saturday, 23 April 2016 12:40 PM
To: [email protected]; Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in 
Australia.
Subject: [gfaforum] Parachute lives

 

Also guys just saw this on Rec-soaring


Oscar-Hotel-Mike 

Inline images 1[          ]

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Apr 19

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An interesting article found on a parachute vendor's web site. 

- John 

================================================== 

 
<http://www.google.com/url?q=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.parachuteshop.com%2Fservice_life_limits.htm&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AFQjCNFX9CS55d3tZa9eIUmApeCtljQRLA>
 http://www.parachuteshop.com/service_life_limits.htm 

Parachute Service Life Limits 

There have been rumors out there for years that there is a 20 year service life 
on parachutes used by pilots, skydivers and military. These are parachutes 
certificated under the FAA's TSO (Technical Standard Order) certification, 
which include TSO C23b, NAS 804, TSO C23c (Categories A, B & C), and TSO C23d. 

Folks - THERE IS NO 20 YEAR RULE, LET ME SAY IT AGAIN FOR CLARITY, 
"THERE IS NO 20 YEAR LIFE RULE". 

The parachute system airworthiness you are using is not affected by the number 
of years, it is affected by the care you give it. Do you take it in regularly 
for service, do you keep it out of the sun, do you use a carry bag, and do you 
keep it clean & protected. This stuff makes the parachute unairworthy, not the 
age. 

Recently the FAA was requested a clarification on parachute service life, 
(Letter from the FAA), and the FAA stated that any parachute under a 
certificated TSO does not have a maximum service life. Ongoing service life of 
a parachute system is established by the Certificated Parachute Rigger at the 
time of Inspection and Repack cycle (Repack Cycle 180 days). 

The FAA further said in its letter,  a parachute manufacturer who wants to 
establish a maximum service life after receiving their TSO certification, 
(under the above TSO's), the FAA says the manufacturer will have to submit 
their request, with backup data, so the FAA can review the data and possibly 
issue a (AD) Airworthiness Directive for that model. 

The FAA issuing this type of AD hasn't happened to date, and I doubt it ever 
will. The request to add a service life by the manufacturer to their manual 
after their TSO was issued has been determined by the FAA as a non-regulatory 
requirement. So service life is determined by the Certificated FAA Parachute 
Rigger on inspection of the parachute system. 

Service Life assigned to a parachute must be included as part of the INITIAL 
TSO  certification for that model, with supporting data to support the request, 
and will be in the manual for parachutes from the day forward but does not 
include parachutes prior to that,  unless the AD process is followed. 

FAA Certificated Senior or Master Parachute Riggers refusing to inspect and 
repack your parachute due to age are ignorant and lacking in foresight and 
doing you a disservice, take your parachute to another Parachute Rigger. 

Letter from the FAA ==>  
<http://www.parachuteshop.com/faa_service_life_limit_parachute.htm> 
http://www.parachuteshop.com/faa_service_life_limit_parachute.htm 

Best regards, 

Donald V Mayer II 

FAA Certificated Master Parachute Rigger 

FAA/CPL/MEL, Skydiving Instructor, Glider Tow Pilot, 

Owner of the Parachute Shop, Saving Lives Since 1973 

Click here to Reply

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