|
Southern Cross
Parachutes supplied six military surplus
student rigs to start the Centre off. GCM
carried three jumpers; so with an instructor and two students
this was sufficient for three student loads. Although the
Centre was set up as a student dropzone, from the very beginning
there was always enough competition jumpers and fun jumpers on
site making it easy to keep up with packing.
As other
aircraft were used to supplement GCM, the surplus equipment built
to 20 backpacks and 10 reserves before the Pioneer LoPo became
the student canopy. The Centre canopy colours were black
and white candy stripes with a red lobster tail.
An Irvin 32ft Ultra Low
porosity canopy was
available for heavy jumpers and the C9 canopies were continued to be used used for light
jumpers.
In the early 60s, Claude had spent considerable time
modifying surplus canopies for sport use and he was working on a design he called "The Gilstar". He often discussed the
need for a non porous student canopy with net skirt and low rate of descent
with Joh Chitty, a partner in Paradynamics and from these discussions Joh
designed the Argosy 30ft canopy. Paradynamics also designed
a student harness/container system and these became the Centre's student rig.
At the time the
Centre lost its lease of Labertouche Airfield fore and aft student equipment
was being phased out and ram air student rigs were starting to be
introduced.
Southern
Cross Parachutes Pty Ltd conducted a parachute loft and retail
outlet at the Centre. It introduced the tandem "Piggyback" system to Australia in addition to many
rigging and packing innovations, including the
"California" static line system, the static line to
pilot chute base tie, "Roll" packing of reserve
parachutes, the rotating arrow visual canopy handling aid for
students, the "Shot and a quarter" Capewell
release modification, ground to air student radios, automatic
parachute activation devices, interactive suspended harness
emergency drill trainers, aircraft mounted student critique
cameras and many more safety and training aids.
|