Skydiving - the art and science of sport parachuting (Bud Sellick)

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Skydiving - the art and science of sport parachuting (Bud Sellick)

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Skydiving - the art and science of sport parachuting (Bud Sellick)

Skydiving - the art and science of sport parachuting (Bud Sellick)

Category :  Others/Miscellaneous (Vintage)

English

Format :  Hardcover

248 pages

Publisher :  Prentice Hall, Inc. 1964

Dimension :  235x158x25mm

Weight :  558g

Condition :  good

Comments :  contain newspaper cut about skydiving, writing inside

Dust Jacket Condition :  folded inside the book, damage

Book Summary : 

Skydiving is parachuting from an airplane for fun. Skydiving can be done individually and with groups of people. Training is required. Unlike most paratroopers, skydivers often wait until they are low, before opening the parachute. The jump can also be made from a helicopter or a balloon that is high enough in the sky. Skydiving can be an exciting sport.


Skydiving includes free falling (usually from an airplane) through the air prior to opening a parachute. Typically skydives are carried out from around 4,000m (or 12,500ft) offering 40 to 50 seconds of freefall time. Longer free fall times can be achieved by exiting an aircraft at altitudes much higher than 4,000m, but very high jumps require pressurized air within the aircraft, and bottled oxygen for the diver.

During a skydive, total freedom and control of the air can be enjoyed as well as many complex and spectacular maneuvers including flat turns, somersaults and formation skydiving. Skydiving can be enjoyed either as an individual - doing solo(alone) jumps - or as part of a team carrying out formation skydiving. Generally, the term ‘skydive’ refers to the time spent in freefall from exiting an aircraft to deploying a parachute but skydiving does include some disciplines such as accuracy landings and canopy formation flying which concentrate on the time spent once a canopy has been deployed.