Pilot Chute Opening Generally you can say a larger size pilot chute
will provide more pulling power than a smaller one. However, that
depends on how it's built. A pilot chute has a trim setting that
determines it's pulling power and this has to do with how much you pull
the apex down. (Controlled by the centerline tapes). This is set during
the manufacturing process, so two pilot chutes the same size could vary
from manufacturer to manufacturer. As for deployment time, that's a
tough one. There may not be that much of difference unless we're
talking really small pilot chutes Vs really big ones. Across the span
of the most popular BASE sizes (42"-48") there may not be much of a
measurable difference in time of deployment. At one time 52 inch pilot
chutes were used for almost all BASE jumps. These were big and heavy
and if thrown hard enough on a short delay they would angle your
deployment out in the same direction. (The most popular ones are called
Hank 52's for the rigger who built them. These were originally designed
and sold to the military to retard the fall of bombs). Over time BASE
jumpers realized 52 inches is a bit of overkill. And some other
problems were starting to surface. The drag retarded the flight of the
open canopy. Folks who are still BASE-jumping with nine cell canopies
are getting bow-tie type openings, and since retired skydiving canopies
are what most are jumping we started to see bridle attachment points
begin to fail. If you are planning a BASE jump where you are counting
on a certain size pilot chute to provide a faster opening you are
cutting things too fine.
It's like when Jump Shack advertises
the speed of their reserve deployment being faster than other rigs that
have the reserve pilot chute inside the container, well, they are
counting on many things going right for that to be true.
When
thinking about available altitude and how best to use it always factor
in room for a line over and a pilot chute hesitation and you will never
die.
Unless it's your time . . .
Nick-BR
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I
read an article in Skydiving Magazine some while ago about using a too
big pilot chute for a specific delay and that "the bigger the better"
would not always yield.
I remember it was something like that if the
pc is too big it pulls too hard on the center cell and therefore
stretches it too much in the vertical direction. Because the center
cell gets pulled out of shape the opening with such a huge pilot chute
could actually be slower than with a well chose pc size.




