Wing Suits
1935 WingsuitDave Terry with Wingsuit in 1984
In the 1930s, professional air-circus parachutist Clem Sohn became fascinated with the idea of flying through the air horizontally rather than just vertically. During his jumps, he practiced “swimming” in the air before jerking his ripcord, and found that he could move as many as 300 feet in any direction. When a friend told him that “you ought to sprout wings,” Sohn decided that he would. After studying the anatomy of flying squirrels and bats, he created a pair of wings from airplane fabric and metal tubing, which he fastened to the arms and sides of his jump suit. Between the legs, he sewed a web-like tail fin. In 1935, he jumped from a plane at an altitude of 12,000 feet and, after a 2,000-foot drop, spread his arms and legs, until the air caught his wings. After performing an inside loop and other aerobatic maneuvers for more than a minute, Sohn pulled his parachute ripcord and landed, about three miles from his starting point. He spent the next two years performing similar stunts at fairs and air meets, until at an exhibition in France in 1937, both his regular and emergency parachutes failed to open, and he fell to his death. Other daredevils who experimented with wingsuits — such as Frenchman Patrick de Gayardon in the 1980s and 1990s — met a similarly grisly fate. In 1999, Croatian base jumper Robert Pecnik and his Finnish compatriot Jari Kuosma developed an improved wingsuit design capable of slowing a flyer to 12-13 meters per second in downward vertical speed, compared to the 50 meters per second that a parachutist will drop.
With the introduction of surface added to the falling human, mankind enters a new realm of aviation.
Paragliders with tiny wingspans offer higher velocity, greater penetration and brings us closer to the ground with landings at higher speeds and flatter planes. Click here to view the new Paraglider abilities. ====CLICK HERE TO SEE THE MOVIE.
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In 1984 Dave Terry and his good friend, Chuck Keskey created a Bat Suit, which would be used to dive into the wind. It's wingspan was over 12 feet and it looked like the WingSuits, but it had a way to open and close the surfaces. To make the surface larger and smaller is to offer control and wing motion like the birds. But Terry feared for those Paragliders and 'lemmings' willing to jump off things. "Lives will be lost," he said, " but when the Wing Suit and paragliders coalese into one, we will be in the first stages of aviation and a greater understanding of slow flight." This is what Dave Terry has been talking about with True Flight, since 1972. Because Dave is now almost 60 years old, it may be doubtful that he'll be on the leading edge of this new He was there 30 years ago, but nobody had a clue what he was talking about.
In 2008, Terry continues to pursue the melding of the Wingsuits and Paraglider. "True Flight is not far off." Dave Says with a smile. "Very shortly, someone reading these words will see what I've been realizing for the last 32 years. God talks through the birds, bats and fish. Listen."

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