Forgotten Field wrote:
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Why the big deal? 10 years is a good service life on a parachute. Especially one that gets walked and sat on and not used. The liability is not from warbirds- it is from the idiots who know more than the riggers and jump trash that should have been destroyed long ago. And how often do you really do a pre-flight on your parachute? Most don't and step in the cockpit onto their seat rig with whatever hydraulic fluid, oil, or dirt is on their shoes or boots. If that rigger didn't pull the parachute out of a box from the factory, he is opening himself up way wide because he did not do the initial inspection. So in reality, he has to go through every stitch in the rig, trust the log books of the guy before him, trust you that you will care for your parachute well (which doesn't happen in most cases) and still will get sued if you have any kind of problem with the rig or get hurt in a parachute jump. Is that worth the pack fee? And you have no way to mitigate that for your rigger. You can't restrict your insurance company from suing him and most of these guys don't use or don't see the need for boilerplate to hold themselves harmless. You can blame it on the insurance companies, too, not just the lawyers. They are still taking out their 9/11 losses on GA, and where is that talked about when it comes down to stuff like this?
Hey, it's easy to bash lawyers. I'm no big fan of all of them, and I've run into my share of slimy ones and ones who did nothing for me. But they have a very important place in society. Most people don't understand the law and don't care about it until they are in a court case standing to lose big dollars or get big jail time. Lawyers have a very complex set of tools to do their work- millions of f***** up laws and varying judicial precedent that may or may not be patent in a changing world. They work hand to mouth most of the time, and get put down by their clients while doing their work. Most of them are out there just trying to preserve the spirit of the law and get equitable results between clients who aren't smart enough to come to agreements between themselves, usually because they are too stupid or greedy to think of anybody but themselves. You can put them down all you want, but in this world of trashy lawmaking, they are a fourth check and balance against our increasingly self-serving government and the political entities they protect.
As usual, I couldn't disagree more.Forgotten Field also provided this gem.
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it is from the idiots who know more than the riggers
I don't appreciate the "idiot" comment.
Here's the deal.
First, I have done quite a lot of skydiving in addition to flying. I have a very healthy respect for the need for perfect equipment in this area. (By the way, I feel the same for the ALSE equpment I wear when I fly, Helmet, serviceable nomex flight suit and gloves, leather or nomex boots, same as I wore when I flew for the military). I thoroughly understand your point about people not treating their equipment properly. I am not one of them. You would have a very difficult time identifing my chutes from new ones. Obviously that is only aesthetics, I never leave them anywhere where they will get excessive UV or any type of weather.
My point is that I believe they should be subject to rigorous testing and inspection each and everytime they are repacked. If they pass these tests no problem. If the fail these test they should be repaired or replaced as nessecary.
The main complaint that I have is with the harness not the canopy, I can understand that the canopy should be replaced periodically, but the current guidance from Strong and Butler is to destroy the entire rig at a specific time regardless of condition. The harness and container could be used for a very long time if tested and kept in excellent serviceable condition.
How would you like it if that same standard was applied to aging airframes? What would you say if all IA's said they didn't feel comfortable putting their signatures in logbooks older than 25 years?
Just something to think about.