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  2. BASE jumping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BASE_jumping

    In the early days of BASE jumping, people used modified skydiving gear, such as by removing the deployment bag and slider, stowing the lines in a tail pocket, and fitting a large pilot chute. However, modified skydiving gear is then prone to kinds of malfunction that are rare in normal skydiving (such as "line-overs" and broken lines).

  3. Parachuting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parachuting

    For human skydiving, there is often a phase of free fall (the skydiving segment), where the parachute has not yet been deployed and the body gradually accelerates to terminal velocity. In cargo parachuting, the parachute descent may begin immediately, such as a parachute-airdrop in the lower atmosphere of Earth, or it may be significantly delayed.

  4. High-altitude military parachuting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-altitude_military...

    United States Air Force Pararescuemen jump at half the height of a typical HALO/HAHO insertion 2eme REP Legionnaires HALO jump from a C-160.. High-altitude military parachuting, or military free fall (MFF), is a method of delivering military personnel, military equipment, and other military supplies from a transport aircraft at a high altitude via free-fall parachute insertion.

  5. Wingsuit flying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wingsuit_flying

    Wingsuit flyer over fields in the UK. Wingsuit flying (or wingsuiting) is the sport of skydiving using a webbing-sleeved jumpsuit called a wingsuit to add webbed area to the diver's body and generate increased lift, which allows extended air time by gliding flight rather than just free falling.

  6. Drop zone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drop_zone

    Drop zone in Skydive Empuriabrava, Catalonia, Spain. A drop zone (DZ) is a place where parachutists or parachuted supplies land.It can be an area targeted for landing by paratroopers and airborne forces, [1] or a base from which recreational parachutists and skydivers take off in aircraft and land under parachutes.

  7. Freeflying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freeflying

    Vertical formation skydiving (VFS) is a subcategory of formation skydiving using high-speed body positions normally associated with free flying. Competitors build pre-selected formations in free-fall with multiple people gripping each other's limbs or specially built "grippers" on their jumpsuits.

  8. Drogue parachute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drogue_parachute

    A Boeing B-52 Stratofortress from the 307th Bomb Wing deploying its drogue chute for landing Drogue parachute deployed on a SAAF BAE Systems Hawk RAF Typhoon using a drogue parachute for extra braking after landing Aeroflot Tupolev Tu-104B at Arlanda Airport in 1968

  9. Vertical wind tunnel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vertical_wind_tunnel

    The first human to fly in a vertical wind tunnel was Jack Tiffany in 1964 at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base located in Greene and Montgomery County, Ohio.. In 1982 Jean St-Germain, an inventor from Drummondville, Quebec, [2] sold a vertical wind tunnel concept to both Les Thompson and Marvin Kratter, both of whom went on to build their own wind tunnels.