This Guy Is Nuts!

Wow .. how on earth do you learn how to do something like that? ... I mean "ooops that's not quite right" is not really an option.
And we thought driving the Zed with the top down is thrilling.
It's one hell of a walk back up to the top to have another go!!!
 
Wow, that's brilliant. Bet his wife has upped the payment on the life insurance since he started with the wing-suits, sooner or later....
 
When I saw the title I thought it was referring to this thread.

http://www.z4-forum.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=15&t=67
 
For a guy (me) who does not condone the thought of jumping out of a perfectly good airplane (crazy mofo's) I think I would actually like this.
 
Aebous said:
For a guy (me) who does not condone the thought of jumping out of a perfectly good airplane (crazy mofo's) I think I would actually like this.


Yea that's why i took up scuba diving and not sky diving cause if something happens I can swim but I can't FLY!
 
I've jumped (and not tandem) from 10,400ft and did the freefall to 4000ft. Absolutely nothing compared to this guy and outstanding props to him. I'd love to have had the ballz and the training to do something like this. The freedom....dayum!! :thumbsup:
 
Wondermike said:
Wow, that's brilliant. Bet his wife has upped the payment on the life insurance since he started with the wing-suits, sooner or later....

Ha!! That is if he can even find an insurance company crazy enough to insure him. The rates would be absurd
:crazydude:
 
Not as impressive as this guy though : Colonel Joe W Kittinger.

Kittinger performed three extreme altitude jumps during August 1960 as part of the USAF research project ‘Excelsior’, a precursor to the US space race, to test survivability at the edge of space.

Excelsior III was the climax of the operation.

Leaping from the open gondola of a 200ft diameter helium balloon at nearly 103,000ft with 99% of the earth's atmosphere below him, Kittinger spent four minutes thirty-six seconds in freefall. As he passed through 90,000ft his speed reached an incredible 614mph – almost the speed of sound in thin freezing air of the upper atmosphere. At 18,000ft his multi-stage parachute, operating on timers and barometric triggers, finally deployed his ‘main’.

This historic jump set an altitude record that still stands today. :o
 
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