que hermoso mi hermano todo se puede soy paracaidista me falta varios saltos para llegar a halo dios nos cuida y protege confiar en el señor jesus pase lo que pase
i have no idea how u guys get over the fear of jumping outta a plane...nothing but respect for anyone that does it especially those that go into combat that way..thank u
29'300 feet (you should have made it 30'000 because it easier to roll off the tounge) Mind you at 29'530 feet (just an additional 230 feet) would have been a a round 9'000 metres
could someone please tell me exactly how he could virtually come back near the camera men and then goes alittle further away and comes back just as if he had some rope attach or something... how can he make the wind nows how to return closer rather then escape and blown away by the wind ? its almost as if the far person is magnet against the person with the camera as he/she gets closer.. but how can this virtually happen when its very strong winds ?
Aircraft was a turbo-Kingair... heated cabin... ground temperatures were in the high 30's C almost 40 and humidity was through the roof... it was actually quite comfortable in freefall... but mind you i have jumped from 12 500' at the end of october in alberta and had frozen solid hands by deployment altitude...
@ShakyBones797 ...yes the average terminal velocity is about 120mph... i personally average about 135 mph in belly to earth freefall.... but on this jump with the decreased atmospheric density... i hit a top freefall speed of 198.5 mph
Yes, the terminal velocity from a low jump (say below 4,500 m/5,000 yards/15,000 ft) is around 200 km/h = 120 mi./h, but from 10,500 m, when you reach about 9,200 m your velocity is more or less twice that (some 90% of the atmosphere is below you). Mine/ours (MIL jump) was measured four times to average close to 390 km/h = 240 mi/h.
rip all people with head phones...........great vid
Nickstudios1000 1 day ago
badass
sgtboburwell 2 days ago
Fuk Me..the g force is about 5
J3RRYKOUTSKY 3 days ago
Nice video
jmmurdy 1 week ago
que hermoso mi hermano todo se puede soy paracaidista me falta varios saltos para llegar a halo dios nos cuida y protege confiar en el señor jesus pase lo que pase
fredy32581 2 weeks ago
i have no idea how u guys get over the fear of jumping outta a plane...nothing but respect for anyone that does it especially those that go into combat that way..thank u
Ralejandro1231 1 month ago
29'300 feet (you should have made it 30'000 because it easier to roll off the tounge) Mind you at 29'530 feet (just an additional 230 feet) would have been a a round 9'000 metres
GeorgeMoonie 1 month ago
I was wrong 11,000 ft.........damn.....
fselmo77 1 month ago
2000ft.....or more....
fselmo77 1 month ago
I see bare ankles at 0:41
Craddoc 2 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
could someone please tell me exactly how he could virtually come back near the camera men and then goes alittle further away and comes back just as if he had some rope attach or something... how can he make the wind nows how to return closer rather then escape and blown away by the wind ? its almost as if the far person is magnet against the person with the camera as he/she gets closer.. but how can this virtually happen when its very strong winds ?
VOXS2 2 months ago
WOW this iS giving me chills and i havent even finished half the video,,
Im Goin SF now.
BruteWisdom 3 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Is that...is that Mark Whalberg at 3:08???
Superbruv07 3 months ago
Comment removed
Superbruv07 3 months ago
Best of Halo
MsYaDong 3 months ago
these guys remind me fo ODST troops lol
PinoyPowWa 4 months ago 2
what a rush!
DerGeist93 4 months ago
Aircraft was a turbo-Kingair... heated cabin... ground temperatures were in the high 30's C almost 40 and humidity was through the roof... it was actually quite comfortable in freefall... but mind you i have jumped from 12 500' at the end of october in alberta and had frozen solid hands by deployment altitude...
jeffcreber098 4 months ago
@victam, when I did my 4 regulatory MIL HALOs from 30,500 ft. I almost froze a finger off twice (different fingers).
Whatza you talking about? Give specifics.
FandensOldemoder 5 months ago
Did I see bare hands at 0:53?
At -50 to -60 C = --68 to -76F ? and falling at 250 mph
Did he loose both or only one?
FandensOldemoder 5 months ago
@FandensOldemoder I find your lack of facts disturbing.
victam 5 months ago
@FandensOldemoder Terminal velocity is around 120 mph.
ShakyBones797 4 months ago
@ShakyBones797 ...yes the average terminal velocity is about 120mph... i personally average about 135 mph in belly to earth freefall.... but on this jump with the decreased atmospheric density... i hit a top freefall speed of 198.5 mph
jeffcreber098 4 months ago
@ShakyBones797& @jeffcreber098
Yes, the terminal velocity from a low jump (say below 4,500 m/5,000 yards/15,000 ft) is around 200 km/h = 120 mi./h, but from 10,500 m, when you reach about 9,200 m your velocity is more or less twice that (some 90% of the atmosphere is below you). Mine/ours (MIL jump) was measured four times to average close to 390 km/h = 240 mi/h.
FandensOldemoder 3 months ago
Stud factor: 9.7
patriotfront 5 months ago
you made shit in you pants!
im6214 5 months ago