Dare to Fly!

The Wingsuit, is a discipline of parachuting and extreme sport that is based on the use of a pressurized nylon jumpsuit, with a design of two wings for the arms and a leg wing, which with the use of inflatable cells, increase the surface of the Parachutist to increase the lift and allow you to fly impressive horizontal distances at a slower descent speed, thus increasing your time in free fall.

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Although it seems easy enough, it is not, and the level of risk to which you are exposed, is very high, which makes this sport something extreme, whether jumping from an airplane or a mountain, the wingsuiter deploy a parachute towards the end of its descent, since a wingsuit cannot provide enough lift to land without causing serious injury or death. However, with the right training, you can learn quickly, and venture to feel the freedom to fly practically by yourself, like a bird, as if you had wings. In this modality of extreme sport, the athlete jumps equipped with a special suit that has membranes that join his arms with the trunk and between his legs so that when he opens the extremities he forms a kind of wing with which he can maneuver.

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Compared to most objects that can fly, aerial suits are products with a fairly simple technology since they do not use motors, propellers or instruments to control the flight, they are little more than a suit with a wing shape. However, they allow a pilot to do some spectacular things, or significantly lengthen the free fall time, even some wingsuit, to stop the fall for a moment, technically.

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With these suits, the horizontal displacement in this modality increases while the vertical descent decreases, compared to the traditional parachuting in free fall, the wingsuiter uses his body to control the speed, direction and lift; the altitude is monitored using a hand-mounted altimeter and an audible warning device stored in the helmet. In order to control the parachute, it is necessary to free the arms to reach the brakes and the wing of the leg must be decompressed to be able to run during the landing, it can take years of practice to achieve an efficient flight and successfully manage the “angle of attack” of the Suit to maximize performance and although it is less acrobatic, you can perform spectacular maneuvers, where the sensation of speed is higher than that in the free fall.

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For the best in this sport there are only a few maneuvers that are considered legendary. One of them is to reach enough speed and lift to avoid free fall. An efficient wingsuiter can achieve descent rates as low as 25 mph, and horizontal speeds of up to 220 mph. Wingsuiters can measure their performance using GPS COMPUTERS and flying in relation to others.

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