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Everyone is required to jump with a properly functioning, turned on Automatic Activation Device at Skydive Orange. If you are a student skydiver or making your first jump, we take care of this for you. Automatic Activation Device-There's not a lot of room for error in skydiving. Let's say that one of the following three things happens during a skydive:
One of the best-known AADs is the CYPRES AAD. CYPRES is short for "Cybernetic Parachute Release System." According to the manufacturer, there are more than 65,000 CYPRES units in the field.
The CYPRES unit has four parts:
The computer has the non-trivial job of deciding when it is time to deploy the reserve. The basic goal is to always deploy the reserve chute if the skydiver is in free fall and makes it down to 750 feet (230 meters) in altitude. However, this is not as easy as it sounds. Here are some of the situations that the computer has to handle to avoid erroneous deployments:
The skydiver turns on the CYPRES on the ground. The CYPRES computer takes a measurement of air pressure on the ground and uses this to determine the skydiver's altitude throughout the day. Whenever the skydiver is on the ground, the unit recalibrates every 30 seconds to handle weather-based changes in atmospheric pressure. Other Brands of AAD-No doubt there is another brand that would also be acceptable. However, when Helmut Cloth invented of truly revolutionary CYPRES AAD, and founded of Airtec GmbH in Wünnenberg, Germany, he set the new standard in many ways. Immediately, Cypres became the preferred AAD, outselling others by probably a factor of over 100. So now Cypres has had the time to prove itself - over 13 years and thousands of installed Cypreses and a very minimal rate of problems, I don't see how any other manufacturer could hope to break into the market and coax skydivers to bet their life on their relatively untested products.
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