프랑스 안시 SIV 코스 2일차 : 스핀과 크라밧 회복

01:10 About Spins 02:31 Spin Keypoints 03:06 How to Enter a Spin 04:57 Spin Recovery Methods 07:12 Spin Example 1 09:34 Spin Example 2 11:34 Precautions When Performing Tasks Involving Rotation 13:12 About Cravats 15:34 Cravat Handling Methods 19:33 Cravat Examples 23:07 Cravat Spin Recovery 24:43 Wrap-up This is the SIV course conducted at Flyeo Parachute School in Annecy, France. Content: Day 2 video covering spins and Cravat recovery Instructor: Fabien, AIRDESIGN Test Pilot with 25 years of experience Since the Annecy SIV is conducted at an altitude of 1,200m, maneuvers and mastery can be achieved through repeated practice. Additionally, through systematic teaching methods, you can master 360-degree spins, spins, and negatives (spin stall, full stall, two-stage). What was a culture shock was that there were 6 SIV training teams (7 members per team, totaling 42 people) at the takeoff site. It was the day the French national paragliding team was performing SIV, and I was amazed to see them maneuvering their gliders at ENZO (CCC grade). (They performed spins and negatives in a continuous sequence without a single moment of rest.) What I realized while taking the SIV course is that simply raising the glider grade is not the answer. You must complete SIV starting from the Low B grade to master the fundamentals; only then can you continue to improve even when you move up to the High C grade. Fortunately, I learned all the skills at the High C grade, but to be honest, I still don't have 100% confidence. I understand that SIV teaching methods and the environments available for SIV are limited in Korea, so I recommend taking SIV courses abroad. They teach the principles and expand your ability to apply them. SIV School I took classes from: https://flyeo.com/contact/ It is good enough to be called the No. 1 SIV School in Anssi. I highly recommend it.