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-   -   Former paratrooper attempts record jump without parachute (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=247142)

Gerald 10-26-20 05:29 PM

Former paratrooper attempts record jump without parachute
 
Quote:

A former paratrooper has attempted to break two world records after jumping from an aircraft into the sea.

John Bream, 34, nicknamed "the Flying Fish", dropped about 130ft (40m) from a helicopter off Hayling Island on the Hampshire coast.

Support divers said he was briefly unconscious when he hit the water and was taken to hospital as a precaution.
https://www.bbc.com/news/av/uk-54692343

No cold feet...eh?

August 10-26-20 05:40 PM

What two records was he trying to break?

Gerald 10-26-20 05:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by August (Post 2703039)
What two records was he trying to break?

No! This man had record,
Quote:

The current world record for the highest jump into water is 191ft (58 metres).

That feat was achieved by Brazilian-Swiss extreme athlete Laso Schaller during a leap from a cliff at Cascata del Salto, Switzerland, in 2015.
https://news.sky.com/story/john-brea...o-sea-12115279

Mr. Bream did a attempt!
Quote:

Mr Bream was raising funds and awareness for All Call Signs and Support Our Paras, two charities which provide mental health support for veterans.

He is believed to have fallen for about three or four seconds before hitting the Solent waters at about 80mph.

He was aiming to set a record for the highest freefall into water from an aircraft. But his attempt has not yet been verified by the Guinness World Records.

August 10-26-20 06:11 PM

The thread title mentions TWO world records. I figured that the highest jump into water would be one of them but I wonder what was the other?

Gerald 10-26-20 06:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by August (Post 2703045)
The thread title mentions TWO world records. I figured that the highest jump into water would be one of them but I wonder what was the other?

Me too! Maybe the speed..? which was "about 80mph".

Gerald 10-26-20 06:20 PM

He have some funds, so here is the link for it https://uk.gofundme.com/f/Highest-ju...ump-into-water

August 10-26-20 06:21 PM

I hope it wasn't something like:


1. Highest jump into water

2. Highest jump into water from an aircraft.


Because then you could add:


3. Highest jump into water from an aircraft while wearing pants.


:)

Gerald 10-26-20 06:23 PM

It is possible that it appears there ...what records it is about, more concretely.

Gerald 10-26-20 06:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by August (Post 2703050)
I hope it wasn't something like:


1. Highest jump into water

2. Highest jump into water from an aircraft.


Because then you could add:


3. Highest jump into water from an aircraft while wearing pants.


:)

Sweet! :)

Platapus 10-26-20 07:09 PM

I bet that was some hard feeling water.

Buddahaid 10-26-20 08:21 PM

People try that from the GG bridge and most fail...

Aktungbby 10-26-20 11:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Buddahaid (Post 2703066)
People try that from the GG bridge and most fail...

Indeed! When I interviewed for Golden Gate bridge security a while back, the 5 person interview panel inquired 'what I an experienced Federal housing officer, would do to improve things on the bridge'. I responded with my customary cheeky sod humor: "open a bungee-cord concession to "let em' try it once!" They were consumed with mirth! So much for formality. During a Civil War re-enactor weekend, some years previously, at Ft. Point directly under the G.G. Bridge, a female jumper had miscalculated her leap and ended up inside the fort. Fortunately ,the grave 0200 on-duty shift, incl. myself, were battle-hardened fire/police 'first responders'. We covered the multiple messy remains with our ponchos (HIV precautions) and summoned the Presidio Park Police to handle the affair, w/o waking some 150 other re-enactors, mostly juveniles, in their bunks. Talkin' firsthand misery here! I was probably going to get the bridge patrol position... till I surmised being the newest recruit on the grave shift on the bridge during Pacific storms at SF Bay's Hells Gate is no place for old 60+ guards to be! I did not show for the second interview even though the panel had apparently liked my no-holds barred response enough to invite me for the second interview....the bridge is now being fitted/equipped with steel netting to prevent jumpers. 26 (known out of 1400 since 1937!) jumpers died this year and Bridge Security prevented another 156 from leaping to their demise.

Jimbuna 10-27-20 03:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Buddahaid (Post 2703066)
People try that from the GG bridge and most fail...

:haha:

Aktungbby 10-27-20 03:40 AM

WORLD'S #2 SUICIDE MAGNET
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Platapus (Post 2703058)
I bet that was some hard feeling water.

Quote:

The four-second fall from the Golden Gate Bridge sends a person plunging 245 feet (75 m) at 75 miles per hour (121 km/h) to hit the waters of the San Francisco Bay "with the force of a speeding truck meeting a concrete building." Jumping off the bridge holds at least a 98 percent fatality rate; and it is speculated the fatality rate is actually higher than 98% because of people whose bodies are never found after they make the jump. As of 2013, it is estimated that 34 people have survived after jumping.Some die instantly from internal injuries, while others drown or die of hypothermia. The Golden Gate bridge's death toll has since been surpassed only by that of the Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge in China.
COLD FEELIN' WATER IMHO but help is just a call away: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...e_Bridge_2.jpg

Jimbuna 10-27-20 04:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Aktungbby (Post 2703109)
COLD FEELIN' WATER IMHO but help is just a call away: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...e_Bridge_2.jpg

Performed a quick search and it looks like the Golden Gate death figure is somewhere in the region of 1,700 and the Nanjing Bridge has recently passed 2,000


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