>>Do you mind if i forward your comments to Mr Nigel Brennan who re packed and 
>>inspected the chute??

Forward away. There's nothing much new or controversial in the
comments. The last paragraphs are quotes from others. This is not
meant as a personal comment about the parachute you are selling, it's
a general comment about our attitude to parachutes.

While repacking some hang glider parachutes with a friend, a professor
in fact, I was unable to throw his chute. His comment was 'it doesn't
matter, I have absolutely no intention of throwing my chute.'

Under those circumstances, it doesn't matter what parachute you carry
or even, if like some hang glider pilots, you have a brick wrapped up
in a towel in your parachute bag to pass an inspection. But if you
want the parachute to open when you need it, then take every care.

Paraglider people frequently throw a reserve parachute for practice.
They also use them a lot. Hang glider people also practice throwing
chutes, though not normally while flying. Both are told to rehearse
their deployment routine on every flight, as soon as the glider is
airborne and stable. What do we do in gliding? I think none of the
above.

I went to a parachute clinic some time ago. I thought it was to teach
repacking. It began at 2 and finished after midnight and there were
plenty of topics still to discuss. The repacking part took only 30
minutes or so. That was the easy part.

If a rigger says that a chute is fine to use, fine but being a
sceptic, I would take a broad range of opinions and if I wanted to use
a canopy in anger, make sure it was not 25 years old!

D
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